
At first tea was advertised as medicinal and was supposed to cure everything from gout to various social diseases.
Tea, coffee and chocolate became popular in Britain in the first half the 1700's. The earliest silver teapots, before about 1730, were pear-shaped. "Bullet-shaped", almost spherical teapots were popular from 1730 to about 1750 when the first British porcelain teapots became available. Silver teapots were rarely produced from that date until about 1770, when drum shaped, and later oval, teapots became popular. These remained popular until the 1800's when most teapots were rectangular.

Those who could afford tea usually also had the means to purchase silver, and by the end of the 1700’s tea wares had become a major part of the silversmith’s trade. These practical objects remain among the most popular silver items with collectors today.