Gorham Silver was founded in 1831 in Providence, Rhode Island, by Jabez Gorham, a master craftsman, in partnership with Henry L. Webster. Jabez Gorham was born in 1792 and at age 14 apprenticed with Nehemiah Dodge, one of the founders of the silverware industry in 18th century New England. There he learned to make coin-silver flatware (lightweight eating utensils made from lightweight, rolled silver) which formed the mainstay of his business in the early years.
After a pretty tumultuous ownership period where Jabez retired, sold the business, repurchased parts of it, took in his son John, saw John leave and then come back as partner, he finally sold his business intrests to his son in 1848. John was determined to grow the company. In 1852 he traveled to England to purchase the first steam-powered drop press to be employed by an American silver company. The increased efficiency allowed him to lower prices for his silver flatware and increase production, eventually leading to Gorham's position as one of the largest silver manufactories in the world. Such was Gorham's expertise and dominance in the marketplace that even Tiffany & Co. outsourced all its silverware production to Gorham.
Between the years of 1879 and 1893 Gorham had displays at every International Fair where they won both public accolades and prizes. At the Columbian Exposition alone Gorham won 47 prizes for excellence.
Since 1860 Gorham had tried to expand into other metals as well but customers refused to pay a Gorham premium for flatware produced in baser metals. Yet the expertise gained in these attempts was not totally lost and its bronze foundry operations were becoming very popular with sculptors. By 1890 Gorham had built the world's largest bronze-casting foundry and by 1920 the company employed almost 2,000 workers. Its art foundry produced many sculptures for the great American sculptors of the day. More than 700 Gorham sculptures are listed in the Smithsonian inventory alone.
The end came in 1967 when Textron purchased the Gorham Manufacturing Company. Gorham ceased operating as an independent business and the new owners started reducing the quality of Gorham's traditionally high-end products in an attempt to regain marketshare, an attempt that was ultimately unsuccessful. The former Gorham, now a division, was resold to Dansk International Designs in 1989, to the Brown-Foreman Corporation in 1991, and to Department 56 in 2005.