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A 19th century mahogany and brass mounted musical automaton table clock, the triple fusee movement striking on a bell and twelve subsidiary bells, with pull repeats to an engraved back plate and a bob pendulum, to an enamelled and brass dial with a silvered chapter ring including calendar, the central crescent shape aperture inscribed 'William Rogers, London', with subsidiary dials for 'Strike/Silent' and 'Minuet/Song/Hornpipe/ Gavot', the lunette painted an exterior inn scene with seated figures and musicians playing a fiddle and a harpsichord with a central dancer, the case with a dome top and brass urn finials, stop fluted canted corners on ogee bracket feet, 24in (61cm) h.
A group of small silver, comprising; a mounted and facetted ruby glass scent bottle, 4.5cm (1.75in), a round engine turned pill box, marks indistinct, 4.5cm diameter (1.75in), a George IV rectangular caddy spoon with a pricked foliate bowl, Birmingham 1829 by Unite & Hilliard, another caddy spoon with an embossed figure of a seated child playing the harp and the handle formed as a boy playing the violin, marks indistinct, and a small desk seal with a Celtic entwined loop handle and centurian-mask citrine intaglio, Birmingham 1926.
Two football games, the first, circa 1930, with a wooden surround, the playing area with ridged compartments occupied by a painted tinplate footballer, thumb operated trigger mechanism causing the player to kick the ball during play, 80.5 by 43.5cm., 31 3/4 by 17in.; the other a modern boxed football game titled Futbito
Eishi (1756-1829) hashira-e, a print with a man playing a flute before two ladies on a terrace, one lady holding a fan, her attendant carrying a lamp; and Eizan, hashira-e, a print with a lady playing a flute from below a hat, a young girl showing us the lady's reflection in a hand mirror, both mounted and framed and glazed. (2)
Eishi (1756-1829) an oban triptych, with numerous ladies at leisure in a garden, some floating flower boats in a pond, others playing with terrapin; and Toyokuni (1769-1825), an oban triptych with ladies having a picnic on the seashore, numerous fishermen hauling in their catch in the background, both signed, sealed, mounted and framed and glazed. (2)
GOLF: A quantity of ephemeral pieces relating to the professional golfer Tom Green and to his father Leslie Green who laid out the course and was pro. at Highcliffe Castle for Major-General E. J. Stuart-Wortley. The course at Highcliffe Castle was opened in 1913 by Princess Christian accompanied by Princess Victoria. The collection comprises, briefly: 9 'real photo.' postcards of the opening game and royal tea party with the players identified in ink; the score cards for Princess Victoria and General Cowans; a handwritten list of Members and Guests at the Royal Tea Party; an A.L.S from Stuart-Wortley to Leslie Green regarding the new course; a mounted photograph of the party and various other postcards. Together with 17 original photographs, up to full-plate, of Tom Green, Henry Cotton, Harry Vardon, Percy Allis & others playing golf, group portraits etc; four of Tom Green's score cards for Burnham Beeches and Selsdon Park Golf Clubs; a menu for the Golf Trade Golfing Society dinner, 1949, bearing numerous signatures, and other pieces. Together with Tom Green's album of newspaper cuttings relating to his career. All contained within a small leather case; condition variable.
An early 19th century Tunbridge Ware gaming box, the elongated octagonal top with perspective cube including palm wood, with vandyke side and rosewood quarter moulded edges, the interior divided for playing cards with bone and wood counters, complete with key, 27cm wide, 21.5cm deep For similar shaped box see Austen Tunbridge Ware page 157.
Thomas Cooper Gotch, "The Year of the rose is brief", signed and dated 1889, watercolour,61cms x 45cms. Footnote: Born in Kettering, Thomas Cooper Gotch studied art at Heatherley's School, Slade, in London and attended J.P. Laurens Studio in Paris. By 1887 Gotch had settled in Newlyn, playing a prominent part in the large artistic community.

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