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Lot 1734

A pair of Radford Storage Jars, yellow and floral decorated Cake stand having epns base, etc

Lot 612

Three named tool marking stamps by G ROOME Sheffield, H RADFORD Sheffield and MELLOR & WARING Sheffield and two others (5 G++

Lot 242

A Crown Ducal vase, two Radford pottery painted vases, a Myott jug with opalescent glaze, a James Plant and Son vase and three pieces of Susie Cooper pottery (8).

Lot 695

A Shelley dish, a Wedgwood green Jasperware dish, Radford vases, etc.

Lot 431

TALL RADFORD POTTERY JUG, MALING COMPORT, CARLTONWARE CANDLE HOLDER AND A CARLTONWARE COMPORT (4)

Lot 338

A Charlotte Rhead fruit bowl, pattern TL96, 29.5cm diameter, and a Radford bowl

Lot 26

A large Carlton ware "Australian" leaf form bowl, 10" x 8", A/F, a hand painted pottery vase by E. Radford, 10½" high, etc. Best Bid

Lot 44

Radford conical shaped jug, moulded and painted with a tavern scene.

Lot 327

A Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery vase of ovoid form by WS Mycock and ET Radford, decorated with a black design over a blue ground, c.1930, height 19.5cm.

Lot 328

A Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery vase of ovoid form by Gwladys Rodgers and ET Radford, decorated with yellow and cream streaked design, c.1930, height 22cm.

Lot 355

A Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery bowl by Gwladys Rodgers and ET Radford, with curled rim, diameter 11.5cm.

Lot 188

A Gouda "Massa" vase of baluster form, height 27cm, a pair of Radford vases, height 17cm, a Gray`s pottery jug, Carlton china crested vase, Poole preserve jar with lid, Royal Winton posy bowl and a Studio pottery vase (8).

Lot 241A

Six pieces of Radford pottery comprising two jugs, one square jug with hand painted trees, two ewers and an oval tubular dish.

Lot 253

A Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery lapis vase of ovoid form by Gwladys Rodgers and ET Radford, painted in blue and green with abstract design, c.1930, height 23cm.

Lot 258

A Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery lapis vase of shouldered cylindrical form by Gwladys Rodgers and ET Radford, painted in greens with an abstract design, c.1930, height 14.5cm.

Lot 266

A Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery lapis vase of ovoid form by Gwladys Rodgers and ET Radford, horizontally ribbed and painted in greens with an abstract leaf design, c.1930, height 17cm.

Lot 268

A Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery lapis vase of swollen ovoid form by Gwladys Rodgers and ET Radford, painted in blue and green with an abstract design, c.1930, height 18cm.

Lot 273

A Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery lapis vase of swollen ovoid form by Gwladys Rodgers and ET Radford, banded in alternating blue, green and grey, c.1930, height 22cm.

Lot 276

A Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery lapis vase of compressed cylindrical form by Gwladys Rodgers and ET Radford, painted in ochre and green with trailed abstract design, c.1930, height 11cm.

Lot 278

A Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery shallow circular bowl by WS Mycock and T Radford, the interior dark lustred frieze of five birds in flight against reserves of mottled orange flambe, dated 1929, diameter 27cm.

Lot 283

A shallow Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery circular bowl by WS Mycock and ET Radford, the interior decorated with a fronded leaf and orange flowerhead design against overall flambé reserves, year symbol 1929, diameter 23cm.

Lot 314

A Pilkington`s Lancastrian pottery bowl by Gwladys Rodgers and ET Radford, with blue, green and yellow glaze, diameter 13cm.

Lot 231

An Elizabeth Radford posy bowl, and three pieces of green leaf moulded pottery, a Wade goblet, five pieces of Wedgwood, a Sylvac jug, various Oriental bowls, and various china

Lot 794

A box of china and glassware including a Radford flower vase, and a Tony Wood teapot in the form of a cockerel View on www.staceyauction.com

Lot 265

A set of six china tea plates with eight cups and saucers, Samuel Radford, c.1880.

Lot 307

Two Radford hand painted flower vases, a small vase and two jugs/see illustration

Lot 242

A QUANTITY OF DECORATIVE POTTERY AND PORCELAIN TO INCLUDE FIGURES, A PARIAN WARE TWO HANDLED VASE ENCRUSTED WITH GRAPES AND AN E RADFORD BOWL PAINTED WITH FLOWERS

Lot 62

An E Radford organic moulded vase, 23cm.

Lot 60

Radford pottery vase, painted with flowers, marked and numbered 162 E.C.M. and an Art Glass vase, (2).

Lot 764

CARUSO ENRICO: (1873-1921) Italian Tenor. Bold, dark fountain pen ink signature (`Enrico Caruso`) on a piece, neatly laid down at the base of an 8vo page removed from an autograph album. The page also bears eighteen signed clipped pieces etc., laid down to the recto and verso, including Charles Santley, Robert Radford, David Lloyd George etc. G to about VG

Lot 185

A collection of silk and other scarves owned by Olive Radford nee Machin who hunted with the Quorn Hounds (Mondays) into her late `70s (6)

Lot 218

Sundry china, Royal Winton, Radford, Carlton etc

Lot 372

A Radford slender tapered jug having floral decoration, a 1930`s Wade Heath jug and a similar jug

Lot 667

A Hornsea Fauna jug, a Radford storage jar, etc.

Lot 726

Assorted Radford and other pottery

Lot 999

A pair of E. Radford floral painted wall pockets

Lot 1026

A Royal Crown Derby Crescent butter dish in Japan pattern with matching knife, original box, and two pieces of E. Radford pottery.

Lot 442

A PELHAM PUPPET, a few pieces of pottery including Radford and two jelly glasses

Lot 239

Eight Art Deco ceramic jugs and vases, various makers including Shelley, Maling, Radford, Myott etc.

Lot 389

A mixed lot of predominantly 1930`s ceramics including Radford etc, also a carnival glass bowl.

Lot 1401

Radford pottery wall pocket, various EP etc.

Lot 105

A pair of vases made for Liberty & Co, probably Brannam, shouldered form with four lug handles, each covered in a mottled green/blue glaze, and a Pilkington Royal Lancastrian vase by E T Radford and Gladys Rogers impressed marks, 23 cm. high

Lot 106

A Pilkington`s Royal Lancastrian bowl, by Gladys Rogers and E T Radford, dated 13th November 1930, painted with lotus flower design in blue and green on a silver ground, and a Royal Lancastrian vase by E T Radford impressed and incised marks 21cm. diam.

Lot 25

‡ Great War Trio, awarded to William Radford, King’s Royal Rifle Corps, 1914-15 Star, British War and Victory Medals (Y-809 Pte. W. Radford. K.R. Rif: C.), extremely fine (3)

Lot 26

Radford Cheese Dish, Mason Mandarin Bowl, Royal Doulton Figure Ninette, Carlton Ware Jug etc

Lot 124

† AN IMPRESSIVE PILKINGTON`S ROYAL LANCASTRIAN LAPIS VASE thrown by E T Radford and painted in shades of green and blue by Gladys M Rodgers, 38cm h, impressed marks, incised initials, painted artist`s device, 1930-36 ++In fine condition and scarce in this size

Lot 340

FOUR VICTORIAN AND EARLY 20TH CENTURY SILVER CEREMONIAL KEYS presented to members of the Bayley family on the opening of public buildings in Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire, variously engraved and inscribed, and a fifth of gold-mounted giltmetal and enamelled with the arms of the City of Nottingham, 7-14cm, various makers and dates, two cased (please see online catalogue at www.mellorsandkirk.com for further details) (5) ++All in good condition, the keys relate to the following buildings: Hall and Offices of the Derbyshire Miners` Association, 1893, Sutton Girl Guides, 1934, Broomhill Road United Methodist Church Bulwell, 1930, The Miner`s Welfare Institute Ilkeston, 1924 and The Radford Recreation Ground, Ilkeston Road, Nottingham, 1904

Lot 1261

S BUCK: THE SOUTH-WEST VIEW OF WORKSOP OR RADFORD ABBEY IN THE COUNTY OF NOTTINGHAM, engrd Print, circa 1726, approximately 5 ¾” x 13 ½” f/g

Lot 225

Assorted earthen wares, to include tureens, fruit bowls, an Emily Radford plate, an Art Deco jug, sifters, and a cheese dish etc

Lot 40

Beswick pottery wall pocket in the form of a hat together with a Radford dish, hare decorated and a Continental pottery vase (3)

Lot 52

Sel. decorative teapots inc. Radford, Carlton Ware "Walking", Grimwades "The Cube", A. Wood "Cube" & 2 Coalport plates

Lot 1558

A hand painted Radford Posy Vase 4 1/4`` tall approx

Lot 781

Boy’s Cinema Annual, 9 vols., pub. Fleetway, 1932 & 1934-41, col. and b&w illusts., orig. linen-backed pict. boards, very slightly rubbed, together with Picture Show Annual, 6 vols., 1936 & 1938-42, duotone illusts. throughout, orig. linen-backed pict. boards, very slightly rubbed, (1940 in orig. glassine d.j.), plus Film Pictorial Annual, 5 vols., 1935, 1937-40, duotone and b&w illusts., orig. linen-backed pict. boards, very slightly rubbed, (1935 vol. in orig. glassine d.j.), plus nine others related incl. five bound vols. of Picture Show magazine, Jan-Jun 1934, Oct 1936-Dec 1939 (bound with orig. wrappers), and a collection of twenty-two orig. comic storyboards including Lupino Lane, Ben & Charlie, Harold Lloyd Snapshots, Larry Semon, Polly Moran, Max Linder, Baby Peggy, Tommy Tucker, and Uncle Squibs, 1920-29, pencil on paper, by artists incl. George Wakefield, H. Parlett, George Parlett, Bertie Brown, G.M. Payne, Tom Radford, W. Radford, A. Ackerbladder, and Ernest Webb, for Film Fun, The Jester, The Butterfly, and Kinema Comic, 250 x 20 mm (10 x 8 ins) and smaller, together with related ephemera, incl. three letters and four printers proof editions of Film Fun. (a carton)

Lot 406

Gordon Radford (1936-), Venetian Fish Market, signed, oil on board, 19.5 x 24.5cm.; 7.75 x 9.75in.

Lot 317

Arsenal memorabilia, comprising: a collection of 37 signed photographs of Arsenal players, nineteen being 10 x 8in. signed photos, eleven 16 by 12in. `Highbury Heroes` photographic prints, three part-signed 16 by 12in. team-group photographs; and four 16 by 12in. photographs with dedications, represented players including Pat Rice, Terry Mancini, Peter Marinello, Brian Talbot, John Radford, Graham Rix, Charlie George, Frank McLintock, Kenny Sansom, Bob Wilson, Anders Limpar and many more; together with a collection of 80 Arsenal player portrait press photographs, mostly 10 by 8in. colours prints of Arsenal stars from the 1970s onwards; and two signed Arsenal books, a club player-by-player book with 39 signatures, and a club Who`s Who with approximately 100 signatures (119).

Lot 65

A highly important gold winner`s medal from the inaugural Football Association Challenge Cup final of 1872, by William Joseph Taylor of London, the obverse with a band of laurel, the reverse inscribed FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION CHALLENGE CUP, 1872, diameter 24mm. The Football Association Challenge Cup is the world`s oldest competition in Association Football. The tournament was proposed by the influential sportsman and administrator Charles William Alcock (1842-1907), an old Harrovian who had joined the F.A. Committee in 1866 and was appointed Secretary of the Football Association in 1870, a position he held until 1895, before serving as Honorary Treasurer and Vice President. On 20th July 1871 Alcock tabled "that it is desirable that a Challenge Cup should be established in connection with the Association, for which all clubs belonging to the Association should be invited to compete". Alcock`s landmark idea was based on his experience of inter-house `sudden death` sporting competitions played at Harrow School. Fifteen teams entered the first competition in 1872, this being exactly half of all the clubs affiliated to the Football Association at the time. This included the Glasgow-based Scottish club Queens Park FC who, in view of the cost of travel, were given a bye until the semi-final. Alcock captained the Wanderers FC team, comprising mostly of former Old Harrovians and pupils from other public schools. Fittingly for Alcock, Wanderers progressed to the final that was played on 16th March 1872 at the Kennington Oval where Alcock also held a position as Secretary of Surrey C.C.C. Wanderers` opposition was the Royal Engineers. The game was played before a crowd estimated at 2,000 who each paid a shilling at the turnstiles. Wanderers won the toss and elected the Harleyford Road End, to play with the wind and the sun behind them. The game kicked off at 3:05pm with the Engineers starting as favourites but they were struck a blow after 10 minutes when Lieut. E.W. Creswell broke his collar-bone in a charge. Despite severe pain he refused to leave the field until the match was completed but the men from Chatham were effectively down to ten men. On fifteen minutes a goal by Wanderers` Morton Betts proved to be the decisive score. Wanderers remained on top for the rest of the game. Alcock had a goal disallowed on 20 minutes after the referee Mr A. Stair from Upton Park had spotted a handball by Wollaston. Wanderers also struck a post. The Royal Engineers created only two scoring opportunities in the match, with the Wanderers` defenders Lubbock and Thompson singled out in match reports for their "admirable and faultless kicking ... repulsing all of the attacks of the Engineers ... their work together was the great feature of the match." The Field magazine described the game as "the fastest and hardest match that has ever been seen at The Oval ... some of the best play on their [Wanderers] part, individually and collectively, that has ever been shown in an Association game. The F.A. Cup trophy, known as the `Little Tin Idol`, was presented by the President of the Football Association, Mr E.C. Morley, at the annual dinner of the Wanderers FC at the Pall Mall Restaurant, Charing Cross, on 11th April. The Committee of the Wanderers FC presented its triumphant players with an inscribed gold medal, the example offered here being the only known survival. In addition, the The Football Association gave each player in the winning team a memento in the fom of a silken badge described in the articles of the competition as being of "a trifling value". The identity of the Wanderers player awarded this medal has been lost over the passage of time. For the record, the Wanderers starting XI was R.C. Welch, E. Lubbock, A.C. Thompson, C.W. Alcock (Capt.), E.E. Bowen, A.G. Bonsor, M.P. Betts (goalscorer), W.P. Crake, T.C. Hooman, R.W.S. Vidal and C.H.R. Wollaston. The Football Association saw the first competition as a roaring success and thereby put into motion what has becoming the most enduring competition in football with a rich and romantic history, especially with the competition being open to the sport`s goliaths and minnows alike. In season 2009-10 a record 762 eligible clubs competed in the competition played over 14 rounds from August to the Wembley showpiece final in May. Momentous events in the competition`s long and colourful history are too numerous to mention here but would include Tottenham Hotspur`s unique achievement of winning the Cup in 1901 as a non-League team; the famous `White Horse` final of 1923 at the newly built Wembley Stadium; the sinister presence of the Graf Zeppelin flying low over the Stadium in 1930; the `Matthews` final of 1953; whilst in more recent times moments etched in the memory would include Charlie George`s supine goal celebration in 1971; Ricky George and Ronnie Radford`s giant-killing goals for Hereford in 1972, Jim Montgomery`s double-save and Bob Stokoe`s jig in 1973; Ricky Villa`s wonder-goal in 1981; Wimbledon`s `Crazy Gang` overcoming the mighty Liverpool in 1988; and Chasetown`s outstanding achievement of being the most lowly ranked football team (eighth tier of the English Football Pyramid) ever to reach the 3rd Round of the F.A. Cup in 2008. The Medal Maker The presentation was manufactured by William Joseph Taylor (1802-1885) a medallist, die-sinker and engraver who was born in Birmingham in 1802 and was the first to be apprenticed as a die-sinker to the Birmingham medallist Thomas Halliday in 1818. Taylor came to London in 1829 and set up his own business at 5 Porter Street, Soho. He is then recorded at 3 Litchfield Street and 33 Little Queen Street before settling in 1866 at 70 Red Lion Street in Holborn, where this medal was made in 1872. He was very entrepreneurial and even set up a workshop in Melbourne, Australia, in November 1852. Taylor`s body or work is extensive and includes a number of prize medals. In the sporting arena this extends to medals commissioned by golf clubs, and for the Melbourne Rowing Regatta. W. J. Taylor died in March 1885 and the business was carried on by his sons Theophilus and Herbert but seems to have folded by 1908, when the presses, tools and machinery was sold off. Provenance: The present vendor`s grandfather was the proprietor of a jewellery shop in the Seven Sisters Road in North London. In the 1950s the jeweller bought the medal as part of a consignment of scrap gold from house clearers. A keen football fan, he very fortunately recognised the importance of the medal which saved it from its intended destination of the melting pot. Grandfather`s F.A. Cup winner`s medal then became a proud and cherished family heirloom which eventually passed to his grandson, the present vendor.

Lot 1555

A Maling Pottery jug, of hexagonal baluster form, printed and painted in the Rosine pattern, 18.5cm high; together with a small Carlton ware pottery basket, (handle repaired) and a Radford pottery cream jug and a Staffordshire pottery sugar bowl. (4).

Lot 192

A mahogany cased mantel timepiece, with alarm striking, the five pillar single fusee movement with anchor escapement, the backplate signed Jas Radford London, to a 6 inch silvered arch dial with central alarm disc, the arch signed Jams Radford, No. 75, Gray`s Inn Lane, London, within a caddy top case with brass carrying handle, 17in (43cm) h.

Lot 1698

A Poole Lifestyle Charger decorated in black line with pair of hands and abstract design, and five items of Radford floral design Cruet Set.

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