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An 18thC longcase clock, the 28.5cm W brass dial signed George Bishop, Redmile, with raised spandrels, Roman numeric chapter and date aperture, in a partial oak case with long arched door, 30 hour rope driven movement, c1770, 192cm H. George Bishop moved to Redmile in 1762 with his wife Mary, born Leicestershire 1733.
A 1920's/30's heavy oak dining room suite, comprising refectory style drawer leaf table on carved bulbous legs and carved cross stretchers 8' x 3'3 with leaves pulled out, eight leather upholstered dining chairs on bobbin turned legs, six standards, two carvers, oak sideboard with carved panel door and three drawers on standing on bulbous type legs 6' wide
A pair of George III 'Hepplewhite' mahogany breakfront side cabinets, each with a reeded edge top, above a frieze drawer and above a brass mesh and pleated silk cupboard door, enclosing an adjustable shelf, flanked by a pair of rectangular tablets, the sides with further panelled book cupbpoards, each enclosing an adjustable shelf, 81.5cm high, 81.8cm wide, 54.5cm deep. (2) Provenance: Bulstrode Park, Gerrard's Cross, Buckinghamshire. Purchased from A. Cook, Wigmore Street, London, 16th April, 1962 for a £1,020. From the estate of the late Lady Dodds. This fine pair of cabinets can be seen in the photograph below gracing one of the corridors at Bulstrode Park c.1899. A park has existed at Bulstrode since the early Middle Ages and was once owned by 'Hanging' Judge Jeffreys, the Lord Chancellor of England. By the 18th century the house and estate had passed to the Bentinck family. The wife of the 2nd Duke of Portland, Margaret Bentinck, housed her natural history and antiquities collection at Bulstrode. The house was remodelled in 1806-1809 by James Wyatt and subsequently came into the possession of the 11th Duke of Somerset.
A George III mahogany and marquetry bonheur-du-jour in the manner of Mayhew & Ince, with an inlaid faux fluted frieze, with a pair of kingwood banded doors inlaid with fan paterae and lilies and chrysanthemums, enclosing an interior with fourteen drawers, pigeonholes and a central cupboard door, the base with a divided frieze drawer, with painted handles, on square tapering legs and spade feet, 150cm high, 92.8cm wide, 50cm deep.
A Bohemian painted pine armoire, polychrome decorated with panels of urns of flowers and a central panel depicting a portrait of Saint Catherine, with a scroll cornice above a door revealing three shelves, the base with a drawer, late 18th / early 19th century, 183cm high, 123cm wide, 50.5cm deep. Provenance: From the estate of the late Michael Gray.
An early 19th century mahogany longcase clock by Stubington of Gosport, the eight day brass movement striking on a bell, with a twelve inch painted arched dial, with Roman numerals, subsidiary seconds dial and a date aperture, signed 'Stubington, Gosport', painted with urns, wheatsheaves and a shell, the case with an arched hood and a conforming trunk door, 206.5cm high. Provenance: Warrens House, Bramshaw.
A 19th century Chinese Canton lacquered bonheur-du-jour, decorated with figures in various pursuits, with buildings, trees, mountains and flowers, with a pair of cupboard doors enclosing an interior fitted with six drawers, a mirrored cupboard door and a watch holder, above a pair of hinged doors enclosing a divided lift-out tray originally for sewing utensils, with a base drawer, on square tapering legs, the right side with a further drawer, 134.2cm high, 55cm wide, 53.9cm deep.
λ A Regency mahogany bedside cupboard by Gillows, with a reeded three quarter gallery above a cupboard door with a turned rosewood handle, stamped 'GILLOWS LANCASTER', flanked by a pair of flame veneered tablet panels with outline mouldings, on turned and ribbed legs, 80.3cm high, 40cm wide, 34.5cm deep. See N. Goodison & J. Hardy, 'Gillows at Tatton Park', Furniture History Society, 1970, pl.12B for five pairs of similar pot cupboards that were supplied by Gillows in 1812 for Tatton Park, Knutsford, Cheshire.
A 19th century mahogany and brass bound campaign box, the hinged lid with a plaque inscribed 'Capt. Willets 34th', with a vacant interior, a pair of Victorian brass candlesticks, an early 19th century cast iron and painted door knocker in the form of a sphinx mask and a pair of painted wood panels depicting the forts at Roumeli Hissar in Istanbul, 30.8cm (max). (6) Provenance: From the estate of the late Lady Dodds.
A George I walnut bureau cabinet, the broken arch cornice centred with an Ionic capital carved with leaves and husks, above a pair of doors inset with later arched mirror plates, enclosing a fitted interior, with eleven cross and feather banded drawers flanking a central concave cupboard door, the interior with two drawers, with architectural pilasters and three large pigeonholes, above a pair of candle-slides, the hinged fall revealing seven further drawers, one with divisions for inkwells, above four long graduated drawers, on later bracket feet, with an ivorine trade label for 'S. & H. Jewell, 131-2, High Holborn, London, W.C.1.', 230.7cm high, 104.5cm wide, 60.5cm deep.
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235346 item(s)/page