A good mid 19th century brass-inlaid ebony travel timepieceThe top with recessed campaign style handle over arched glazed side panels and front door lined in brass with angled silvered sight ring on a plinth base with brass button feet. The enamel Roman dial with outer minute track and good open heart shaped hands set within a boldly cast mask centred by a shell. The shouldered rectangular plates united by four turned pillars, with chain fusee to the anchor escapement, the pendulum with fine screw adjustment and central locking bar. Ticking. 18cms (7ins) high. For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
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An early 18th century walnut longcase clockStephen Asselin, LondonThe overhanging cornice with silk-backed fret set on Doric columns, the long door with feather banded border framed by a D-moulded edge on a matching base and stepped plinth. The 12 inch square brass dial with cherub and crown spandrels enclosing the silvered Roman and Arabic chapter ring with lozenge half-quarter markers and signature centred at VI, the matted centre with ringed winding squares and decorated date aperture. The movement with five knopped pillars, anchor escapement and rack striking on a bell. Together with a brass-faced pendulum and two brass-clad weights. 2.07m (6ft 9.5ins) high.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: TPTP For auctions held in Scotland: Lots will be moved to an offsite storage location (Constantine, Constantine House, North Caldeen Road, Coatbridge ML5 4EF, Scotland, UK) and will only be available for collection from this location at the date stated in the catalogue. Please refer to the catalogue for further information.For all other auctions: Lots will be moved to an offsite storage location (Cadogan Tate, Auction House Services, 241 Acton Lane, London NW10 7NP, UK) and will only be available for collection from this location at the date stated in the catalogue. Please note transfer and storage charges will apply to any lots not collected after 14 calendar days from the auction date.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A rare late 18th century mahogany two-day marine chronometer with Z- balanceJohn Arnold and Son, London, No. 120/210The later bespoke octagonal case with a glazed top lid with brass bezel over plain sides and a keyhole to the front, the underside with rotating circular winding shutter. The 4.5-inch signed silvered dial with Roman chapter ring and outer Arabic minute numerals marked in 5s, with individual minutes marked on a single line border, the centre signed John Arnold & Son London No 120; a large subsidiary seconds dial between V-VII centred by the initials JRA, below blued steel spade hands.The full plate movement with four ringed and tapered 'cannon barrel' pillars with maintaining power to the chain fusee, free sprung blued steel helical balance spring with diamond endstone set in a double-screwed chaton to an Arnold type detent escapement, the bi-metallic Z balance with brass arm and cylindrical timing weights, the barrel mounted to the backplate with a bridge cock and signed John Arnold & Son London No 120/210, Invt. et Fect. 13cms (5ins) highFootnotes:Provenance:The private collection of Dr Vaudrey Mercer, and thence by descent. Literature:Staeger, H. (1997) 100 Years of Precision Timekeepers from John Arnold to Arnold & Frodhsam 1763 – 1862 Gerlingen: Karl Dieringer, page 309For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A very rare, dated, mid 18th century mahogany-crossbanded oak longcase clock with Dutch strike and bolt-and-shutter maintaining powerHenry Hindley, YorkThe inverted bell top with shaped cresting flanked by twin capped pedestals over a stepped multi-part cornice raised on freestanding reeded Doric columns, the long trunk door with mahogany crossbanded edge on a matching panel base and apron. The 12 inch arched brass dial with large subsidiary date dial framed by addorsed dolphin mounts over mask-and-scroll spandrels enclosing the silvered Roman and Arabic chapter ring signed either side of VI, the finely matted centre with running seconds and matted shutters for the maintaining power. The weight driven movement secured to the (replaced) seatboard by twin J-bolts locating into the lower edges of the plates which are united by four typical turned baluster pillars of particularly good colour, the going train with maintaining power engaged via a pull cord below, the striking train with rack striking system on a bell, (originally Dutch striking, now one bell hammer removed). The frontplate with engraved date 1743. The tapering steel rod pendulum with brass faced lenticular bob, and a pair of lead weights. 2.41m (7ft 11ins) high.Footnotes:Henry Hindley was born 'Henry Hindle' in 1699 to Margaret Proctor and Henry Hindle, a blacksmith, in Great Harwood, near to Blackburn. The Hindles were a well-known blacksmith family in Great Harwood, going back at least 150 years. It has been suggested that Henry served his apprenticeship in Wigan and at least two clocks signed Hindley de Wigan and dated to around 1720, are known to exist, which would support this conclusion. It is unknown who his master was; John Burgess, a Wigan clockmaker and gun smith, has been suggested, though there is no concrete proof that this was the case. Henry was the eldest of eleven, possibly twelve children. His sister, Katherine, was around a year his junior, followed by John (1704), Elizabeth (1705), Sarah (possibly another sister, though not confirmed), Mary (1708), Anne (1709), Edith (1711), another Anne (1713), the twins Margaret and Alice (1714), and the youngest of the siblings, Roger, who was born in 1716. By 1731, Hindley was in York, obtaining the Freedom of the City in March of that year. In order to gain Freedom in York, a horologist either had to be apprenticed in York, or pay for their freedom, with gifts being accepted in lieu of payment. Hindley accordingly gifted two specially made eight-day longcase clocks; one for the Mayor of York's home (Mansion House) and another for the Common Hall/Guildhall. He also agreed to maintain both clocks for a year (after which point, he would be paid for servicing them) and was subsequently granted his freedom. At some point, he married a woman named Sarah, and the couple had at least two children, Elizabeth and Joseph. The latter was born around 1728 and would likely have been apprenticed to his father.Hindley originally appears to have lived in Petersgate, before moving in 1741 to the corner of Blake Street and Stonegate. Around the time of his move to York, he seems to have apprenticed his younger brother Roger, though no formal record of this apprenticeship exists. Roger would later move to London, seemingly around the time that Henry moved to Blake Street and Stonegate. His main trade was watch-cap manufacture, and as no finished timepieces are known with his signature, it is assumed he built his career on supplying parts for the trade. He was known to have married, and the couple had at least one son, John. The last known record of this part of the Hindley family is in 1785, where Roger is noted as still an active horologist. In addition to changing residence in 1741, Henry Hindley made the acquaintance of John Smeaton, who would eventually become a London scientific instrument maker and civil engineer, as well as a life-long friend and posthumous promoter of Henry Hindley. During their first meeting, Smeaton references a wheel-cutting engine in Hindley's possession, and of Hindley's own manufacture around this time, which was equipped with an endless screw, and the ability to cut up to 360 teeth. Smeaton was so intrigued with the machine and its manufacture, that he would later deliver a lecture before the Royal Society in 1785, specifically about the machine and Hindley's process for dividing circles. The machine was acquired by a varied string of clockmakers, after Hindley's death, and alternatively run down and restored. It is unknown what eventually became of it.In addition to clocks, around 67 of which are extant (most being longcases, followed by turret clocks and then spring driven clocks) Hindley was known to have made at least two equatorial telescopes. The first was made around 1754, a contemporary opining that the mounting for the telescope was originally made to test the accuracy of Hindley's wheel cutting engine. He advertised the finished telescope for sale in the local newspaper of August that year, though it seemed to generate little interest. The telescope languished until 1761, when it was bought by a landowner, William Constable, to watch the transit of Venus. The second telescope Hindley made appears to have been made on commission for the Duke of Norfolk. Additionally, a pyrometer and rack-driven fusee engine are known to have been made by Hindley. Elizabeth died in 1762, the exact cause being unknown. Sarah followed shortly after, around the end of the same year. Henry continued his business until his death in 1771, reportedly after a 'lingering illness', though he managed to install a turret clock made for St. John's Church in Manchester before his death. One of the last jobs completed before his death, poetically, was the servicing of the clocks he had made for the Manion House and the Guildhall. He was described in his obituary as a 'Clock, Watch, and Mathematical Instrument maker.' Joseph took out a notice the following week, that he would be continuing his father's business. In 1774, shortly after completing work on the Holy Trinity Church's clock in Hull, Joseph also died, apparently in the middle of making an atmospheric steam engine for the same town's waterworks. He was described as a clock and watchmaker, with his obituary declaring him 'a most ingenious man, and esteemed one of the best Mechanics in the North of England.' Joseph had no children, nor did he ever marry, meaning that six months later, all the tools he inherited from his father were sold off, including the famed dividing engine.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A fine mid 18th century gilt metal mounted burr walnut table clockRobert Higgs, LondonThe stepped caddy top with substantial brass centre section, flanked by five ball-and-spire finials over a concave cornice supported by a well-cast Caryatid mount to each of the canted corners, terminating in a stepped brass base on cast block feet, the sides with shaped sound frets within brass frames. The seven inch arched brass dial with large date subsidiary over twin smaller subsidiaries for regulation (marked Adelantar and Atrafar) and strike/silent (Tocar/Silencio), the silvered Roman and Arabic chapter ring framing the finely matted centre carrying the shaped signature plaque, with fine blued steel hands. The movement with substantial plates united by six knopped pillars, pivotted verge escapement with rise-and-fall regulation, rack striking on a bell with trip repeat. Ticking, striking, together with a door key. 57cms (22.5ins) high.Footnotes:Provenance:Anthony Woodburn.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A late 17th century walnut longcase clock with 10 inch dial, bolt-and-shutter maintaining power and green-stained inlayRobert Seignior , London The overhanging cornice with inlaid entablature supported on twisted columns, the long door decorated with six panels of delicate inlay featuring tulips, carnations, roses and other flowers interspersed by green-stained bone leaves in shaped ebony and boxwood borders, with oval lenticle, the matching base on bun feet, the sides decorated with three boxwood lined panels. The 10 inch square brass dial with large winged cherub head spandrels framing the silvered Roman and Arabic chapter ring, finely matted centre with small subsidiary seconds dial, and date aperture, signed along the lower edge. The movement united by five latched, knopped and ringed pillars, with anchor escapement and outside count wheel striking on a bell. Together with a brass-faced pendulum, two brass-clad weights and a trunk door key. 1.97m (6ft 6ins) high.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: TPTP For auctions held in Scotland: Lots will be moved to an offsite storage location (Constantine, Constantine House, North Caldeen Road, Coatbridge ML5 4EF, Scotland, UK) and will only be available for collection from this location at the date stated in the catalogue. Please refer to the catalogue for further information.For all other auctions: Lots will be moved to an offsite storage location (Cadogan Tate, Auction House Services, 241 Acton Lane, London NW10 7NP, UK) and will only be available for collection from this location at the date stated in the catalogue. Please note transfer and storage charges will apply to any lots not collected after 14 calendar days from the auction date.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A good late 17th century ebony table clockDaniel Quare, LondonThe case with typical turned handle on S-scroll uprights on ball pommels over a caddy with four applied mounts, the sides with rectangular glazed panels to a moulded plinth and replaced block feet. The 6.5 inch square dial with winged cherubs heads spandrels framing the silvered Roman and Arabic chapter ring with fancy half hour markers and inner quarter track, the finely matted centre with ringed winding squares and decorated apertures for date and mock pendulum, signed between VII and V, with blued steel hands. The twin gut fusee movement with six knopped and ringed pillars, pivoted verge escapement, the striking train with rack strike on a bell (quarter repeat train now removed). The backplate with single line border framing a symmetrical pattern of interlaced foliate scrolls centred by the signature in a wheatear border 39cms (15.5ins) high. This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Tolkien (J.R.R.) The Lord of the Rings, 3 vol., comprising The Fellowship of the Ring, fourth impression, 1955; The Two Towers, second impression, tape repairs to pp.159-160, 1955; The Return of the King, first impression with signature mark '4' and sagging text block to p.49, 1955, folding maps at end, modern blue half morocco with red spine labels, gilt, slip-case, 8vo.
Victorian Rosewood Canterbury Victorian rosewood and satinwood inlaid canterbury, three divisions supported by ring-turned supports, the corners surmounted by ebonised finials with ivory centres, single long frieze drawer with marquetry swags and brass handles, raised on turned legs with brass castors.Ivory declaration submission reference: M3T3YRET59.5cm wide, 38cm deep, 53.5cm highSome losses to the veneer with a coupe of patch repairs. See photos.
George III Oak Dresser Base George III oak dresser base, shaped backboard on a rectangular two plank top with cross-banding, fitted with an arrangement of seven cock beaded and cross-banded drawers with replacement brass bail handles, surrounding two central cupboard doors, base with chamfered edges, panelled sides, on bracket feet.212.5cm wide, 53cm deep, 106cm highTwo missing pieces of crossbanding to the top with ring marks and staining, one drawer handle missing, missing sections of cock beading.
John Oliver, Manchester Longcase Clock John Oliver, Manchester, mid-18th century longcase clock, 30 hour movement with external countwheel striking on a single bell, square brass dial with a silvered chapter ring, Roman numerals, single finger with a subsidiary date aperture. All contained in an oak case with a moulded cornice over a plain frieze with three oval cutouts, square glass with columns to each corner of the hood and glazed side panels, long door to trunk with moulded bead and glass bullseye panel, box base 52cm wide, 25cm deep, 200cm high
John Grindall, Dumfries, circa 1889 longcase clock John Grindall, Dumfries, circa 1889 longcase clock, 8-day two train movement striking on single bell, brass arched dial with rolling moon with day date markers, main dial with ormolu spandrels, silvered chapter ring marked with Roman and Arabic numerals for hours and minutes, central dial with secondary date aperture and minute dial finely engraved with scrolling tendrils, mahogany case with brass finials to canopy, glazed single door enclosed by two classical columns with brass mounts, central long door with quartered columns, each with brass capitals, box base with chamfered corners, all standing on bracket feet.width 56cm (22"), depth 24cm (9.5"), height 250cm (98")Clock movement completely refurbished, some slight discolouration to silvering on chapter ring, case with good figuring to mahgoany.
Six Steiff bears to include Fynn beige teddy yellow tag 111860, Cappuccino mohair teddy yellow tag 039768, Gold mohair teddy yellow tag 002915, Black mohair teddy yellow tag 039454, Koala alpaca teddy yellow tag 039416, Polar alpaca teddy yellow tag 039409 and Christal teddy key ring white tag 00601 in original packing

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1087795 item(s)/page