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A very rare 2' four fold ivory rule and square with protractor hinge by THOMAS BRADBURN & SONS Birmingham with German silver fittings and Patent locking device for 45 and 90 degree angles, also with Her Majesties Royal Letters Patent and the hinge engraved T.H.IVEY, slight sprain and one pin missing o/w G++
A Large and Impressive Irish Silver Two-Handled Tray, and two en-suite smaller trays of oblong form with canted corners and cast pierced rims modelled as stylized Lurcher dogs, the large tray engraved to the front with presentation "From the Members and Friends of The Fingal Harriers to C.L. O'Callaghan on his resigning the Mastership of the Hunt, 1904-1912", also an engraved crest of sword in hand, dexter, above a shield containing three crescents and three lions rampant above the Latin motto "Semper Idem" (Always The Same), the reverse engraved with forty-five names. Dublin, 1912, maker West & Sons, in contemporary green baize-lined oak box with Catchpole & Williams ivory label, approximately 230ozs in total See illustration. Lots 173-187 bear the family crest of The O’Callaghan Family of Maryfort, Co.Clare, namely a dexter arm, embowed, couped at shoulder, in hand a sword, thereon a snake. Some pieces were presented to C.L. O’Callaghan as Master of The Fingal Harriers Hunt, founded in 1881 and still in existence, while some trophy cups were awarded for Croquet tournaments held at Devonshire Park, Eastbourne between 1910-21, and were presented by the 9th Duke of Devonshire, Victor Cavendish, also Mayor of Eastbourne. The O’Callaghan family have ancestral links to the 7th Duke of Devonshire and the Cavendish family. Cornelius O’Callaghan (1741-97) was made 1st Baron Lismore with the peerage continuing with the 1st Viscount Cornelius O’Callaghan (1775-1857) (son of 1st Baron Lismore) and becoming extinct in 1898 on the death of George Ponsonby O’Callaghan (1815-1898) 2nd Viscount Lismore.
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239220 item(s)/page