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Lot 543

A motorised large scale model of a Clyde Pilotage Authority (Glasgow) boat `Cumbrae`, well detailed, on stand, 88 cm long

Lot 604

Victorian set of bale-scales with copper scale

Lot 703

A WWII Air Ministry sextant by Hughes & Son, with silvered brass scale, 1943, in hard shell case, Ref No. 6B/177

Lot 234

A George III silver canted-rectangular nutmeg grater by Thomas Phipps, James Phipps II & Edward Robinson II, London 1812, engraved with fish scale borders to the covers, engraved twice with two crests under a coronet, 5cm (2in) wide. Provenance: Cornwallis. The demi-dragon is the crest for MANN and the stag lodged reguardant on a mount is the crest of CORNWALLIS.

Lot 276

An early Victorian silver gilt ogee small teapot, maker’s mark ‘W..’ (over punched), London 1842, with a flower finial to the scale and foliate scroll engraved flat coner, a leafy bifurcated twist handle, embossed with ribbon-tied flower and scroll reserves, engraved with a cypher ‘JC’ under a coronet, 18.5cm (7.25in) long, 388g (12.5 oz) gross. Provenance: Cornwallis

Lot 278

A George III silver baluster coffee pot by Thomas Wallis I, London 1780, with a flower finial, a later leaf-capped double handle (with rubbed additions marks) and later flower, scale and scroll work, the circular foot pierced, engraved with the crests of Mann and Cornwallis under a coronet, 24cm (9.5in) high, 830g (26.7 oz) gross (the finial unmarked). Provenance: Cornwallis

Lot 200

A pair of 20th Century Dresden cylindrical vases decorated with floral sprays to a white ground above green scale and gilt borders, 14 cm high.

Lot 381

Scale model of a masted yacht with authentic deck, rowing boats and rigging, on a wooden stand. 72cms high.

Lot 521

Pearson Bros. Ltd, Grimsby. A live steam scale model traction engine advertising the company of typical form with a tin plate and metal Chassis in presentation box with additional photograph. Approx. 71cms long. The engine was made especially for an ex worker at Pearsons and is an extremely rare survivor.

Lot 480

A “Trine” wooden needle case, together with a brass and enamel box, a military buckle, a pocket balance scale and Prussian button (6)

Lot 840

A DERBYSHIRE COLOURED HARDSTONE INLAID BLACK `MARBLE` THERMOMETER of arched shape framed by fuchsia, on stepped base, 18cm h, c1870 In good original condition with tiny loss to the stems of one or two of the fuchsia, lacking one of the four screws which secures the glass thermometer tube to the ivory scale. No restoration

Lot 114

A ROYAL WORCESTER PLAQUE painted by G Johnson, signed, with a ginger kitten in a purple ribbon with a bow, seated before an empty dish, 23.5 x 15cm, printed mark and date code for 1925 George Johnson, who was employed at the Worcester factory from at least 1883 specialised in the painting of birds, in particular the exotic or fancy birds on replicas of 18th c `Dr Wall` scale blue ground wares. The present plaque is highly unusual for its charming cat subject and was perhaps made to special order. In his spare time he painted both oils and watercolours and was according to Sandon a "master in his own field". He had retired by 1933 and died in 1938 (see H Sandon, Royal Worcester Porcelain from 1862 to the Present Day, 1973, p96). In fine condition free from damages, scratches or other faults. No restoration in what is possibly the original 18th c style gilt frame and mount. For many years in the present private vendor`s family`s ownership

Lot 578

CHARLES ANSELL (?) (1752-?) THE DANGER OVER OR BILLY`S RETURN TO JOHN BULL (BM 9225) AND BLOODY NEWS-BLOODY NEWS OR THE FATAL PUTNEY DUEL (BM 9218) etchings in fresh contemporary colour, published by S W Fores, June 4th 1798 and May 26 1798, the both watermarked 1797, 36 x 25.5cm and 25.5 x 41cm and three other caricatures including another of Pitt, comprising Charles Williams, THE EX-MINISTER AND THE METEOR (BM 10235) April 13th 1804, Isaac Cruikshank - CHURCH PROMOTION, OR HOW TO SCALE A PULPIT! (BM 11224), Febry. 25 1809 and John Cawse (?), A PLEASANT DRAUGHT FOR LOUIS... (BM 12268) [?May 1814] unframed (5) Variable condition - defects all visible on the scans of all 5, available on request. Mostly trimmed to, or within, platemark

Lot 580

GEORGE GOODWIN KILBURNE, RI (1839-1924) A TENDER PLANT signed and dated 1876, pencil and watercolour heightened with white, 45 x 34.5cm A highly characteristic, beautifully preserved, large scale example of Kilburne`s highly detailed watercolour technique, in early 20th c giltwood and composition frame. Long in the present private family`s ownership

Lot 141

Early 19th Century mahogany cased stick barometer by John Testi of Chester, broken arch pediment, silvered register plate with manual Vernier scale and fahrenheit thermometer and engraved Jh Testi, Chester, 95cm high.

Lot 142

George III inlaid mahogany cased stick barometer by R. Harris, silvered register plate with manual Vernier scale and engraved R.Harris Fecit, 96cm high.

Lot 144

19th Century Anglo-Indian mother-of-pearl, abalone shell and brass inlaid hardwood cased stick barometer by T. Wheelhouse of Hatton Garden, London, shaped arch pediment, allover foliate bird and ribbon decoration, ivory register plates with double rack and pinion Vernier scale, fahrenheit and Reaumer thermometer, cushion shaped cistern cover, 114cm high.

Lot 145

George III mahogany cased stick barometer by P. Teranio, broken arch pediment, brass register plate with manual Vernier scale and fahrenheit thermometer enclosed by a glazed door, 95cm high.

Lot 146

George III mahogany cased stick barometer by Farmen of Christchurch, broken arch pediment, brass register plate with manual Vernier scale, enclosed by a glazed door, 96cm high.

Lot 147

George III mahogany cased stick barometer by Lione Somalvico & Co of London, broken arch pediment, silvered registered plate with manual Vernier scale and fahrenheit thermometer, engraved Lione Somalvico & Co, 125, Holborn Hill, London, enclosed by a glazed door, 97cm high.

Lot 148

George III mahogany cased stick barometer by J. Gilbert of London, broken arch pediment, silvered register plate with manual Vernier scale and engraved J. Gilbert, Ludgate Street, London, 99cm high.

Lot 149

George III mahogany cased stick barometer by John Gally of Exeter, broken arch pediment, brass register plate with manual Vernier scale and fahrenheit thermometer enclosed by a glazed door, 98cm high.

Lot 150

George III mahogany cased stick barometer by Watkins of Bristol, arch top with brass register plate having manual Vernier scale and fahrenheit thermometer, engraved Watkins, Clare Street, Bristol, 94cm high.

Lot 163

Oak cased Admiral Fitzroy`s storm barometer by Negretti & Zambra, register plate with rack and pinion Vernier scale, fahrenheit thermometer, 109cm high.

Lot 164

Oak cased Admiral Fitzroy`s storm barometer by Negretti & Zambra, register plate with rack and pinion Vernier scale, fahrenheit thermometer, 109cm high.

Lot 167

Early 20th Century oak cased combination barograph and barometer having six tier vacuum, and with engraved silvered barometer scale, 36cm wide.

Lot 607

Rare mid 18th Century brass mounted mahogany horse measure by Robert Wogdon of London, engraved brass scale measuring both hands and inches and dated 1765, sliding level with engraved brass plate inscribed `Wogdon, Cockspur Street, Charring Cross, London` and another inscribed `Wogdon - Gun Maker`, 113.5cm high. Robert Wogdon in partnership with John Barton was to become one of the most eminent gunsmiths in 18th Century London. They were famed for the manufacture of dueling pistols to the extent that duels in England were sometimes referred to as `A Wogdon Affair`. This measure pre-dates that partnership by 30 years.

Lot 172

A PAIR OF DERBY TREMBLEUSE CHOCOLATE CUPS, COVERS AND STANDS painted with blue bands and heavily gilt with moulded scale borders around a single rose to wells, the covers with scroll finials, painted mark in blue, circa 1770. See illustration

Lot 698

William James Blacklock (1816-1858), an oil on canvas, "Blea Tarn and The Langdale Pikes". 17.5 ins x 23.25 ins, signed and dated 1854. . William James Blacklock 1816-1858THE LANGDALE PIKES ABOVE BLEA TARN1854It is no exaggeration to say that William James Blacklock is one of the great landscape painters of the nineteenth century, and perhaps the most remarkable of all of those who devoted themselves to the representation of the Lake District. He is less well known than he should be – the modern ‘rediscovery’ of the artist commenced in 1974 with an insightful article in Country Life by the late Geoffrey Grigson (‘A Painter of the Real Lakeland’, 4 July 1974, pp. 24-26), and was carried forward in a ground-breaking exhibition at Abbott Hall in Kendal, organised by Mary Burkett in 1981 – but on other occasions he has been omitted from landscape surveys, perhaps because of the very individuality of his work which makes them difficult immediately to characterise or readily to place in conjunction with those of his contemporaries. Nonetheless, Blacklock is a most fascinating and rewarding artist, who in the last half-decade or so of his tragically short life painted a small handful of masterpieces which serve as a testament to his deep love and knowledge of Cumberland and the English Lakes.The Blacklock family had been long established in the neighbourhood of Cumwhitton, to the south west of Carlisle, farming there at least since the 1500s. W.J. Blacklock’s father was in fact living in London, where he made his living as a bookseller and publisher, at the time of the painter’s birth, but returned to Cumberland in 1818. The younger Blacklock’s career as an artist commenced when he was apprenticed to the Carlisle engraver and lithographer Charles Thurnham, with whom he later collaborated on a series of prints showing the railway line between Newcastle and Carlisle. W.J. Blacklock enrolled for a period at the Carlisle Academy of Arts, prior to its closure in 1833, working under Matthew Ellis Nutter. In 1836 he returned to London, then aged twenty, living there for the following fourteen years. How he occupied himself at this stage is not known, nor is it clear whether he could rely on the sale of works for a livelihood. Works by him – generally showing north-country landscapes – were exhibited at the Royal Academy and British Institution. Clearly he gained some reputation on the metropolitan artistic scene, as his landscape paintings were commented upon enthusiastically by J.M.W. Turner, David Roberts and John Ruskin. Much concerning Blacklock’s career, and especially the question of his contact with other artists, is a matter of speculation. His name is largely absent from the diaries, correspondence and memoirs of the Pre-Raphaelite circle, the members of which were in any case much younger than him, but Blacklock would certainly have seen early works exhibited by members of the group and their associates. We know that he was in contact with William Bell Scott, headmaster of the Government School of Design in Newcastle, and who was in turn a close friend of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. It was almost certainly by Scott’s introduction or recommendation that Blacklock built up a circle of patrons in the North East. Scott and Rossetti may have hoped to meet Blacklock on the occasion of a walking tour they made together from Newcastle to Carlisle in June 1853. Scott, who like Rossetti was a poet as well as a painter, seems to have recorded a vain attempt to visit the painter in a poem entitled ‘An Artist’s Birthplace’, published in 1854. The verse describes the arrival of two men at the cottage home of a painter who may clearly be recognised as Blacklock: A fit place for an artist to be reared;Not a great Master whose vast unshared toils,Add to the riches of the world, rebuildGod’s house, and clothe with Prophets walls and roof,Defending cities as a pastime – suchWe have not! but the homelier heartier handThat gives us English landscapes year by year.There is his small ancestral home, so gay,With rosery and green wicket. We last metIn London: I’ve heard since he had returnedHomeward less sound in health than when he reached That athlete’s theatre, well termed the graveOf little reputations. Fresh againLet’s hope to find him.The verse corroborates what sparse biographical information we have for the painter (and which derives principally from an article in the Glasgow Evening News, 25 July 1900, entitled ‘An Artist’s Career’ and contributed by Edward Pennington presumably on the basis of information received from the artist’s family, despite forty-two years having passed since his death): the painter had returned to Cumberland because his health was deteriorating, probably as a result of syphilis, but also – according to Scott’s account – because of the professional frustrations and commercial pressures that went with trying to work as an artist in London. In 1850 Blacklock seems to have engaged in a last determined bout of activity as a landscape artist, perhaps fearing that he had not many years remaining to him and wanting to put together a group of works in which his particular artistic principles were to be defined. This small corpus – consisting of views in the Lakes and countryside around Cumwhitton, and all made in a period of about four years – serve as his lasting memorial. Paintings such as Devock Water (Abbott Hall, Kendal), of 1853, and Catsbells and Causey Pike (Tullie House Art Gallery, Carlisle), of 1854, represent timeless images of particular places which speak of the painter’s love for the landscape that he was representing. The present view is of the Langdale Pikes, seen beyond Blea Tarn, and therefore from a vantage-point looking towards the north west, and with the direction of afternoon light from behind the artist’s left shoulder. A shoreline of purple heather and strewn boulders forms the foreground, with a brown-coated fisherman on the left side. E. Lynn Linton, in his book The Lake Country (1864), used an engraving of the same view by W.J. Linton to head his chapter ‘Langdale and the Stake’, describing in his text the mountains seen from this vantage-point at ‘the back of Blea Tarn’: ‘the highest to the right is Harrison Stickle, that to the left Pike o’ Stickle, and the long sweep to the right of Harrison Stickle is Pavey Ark, in the cup or lip of which lies Stickle Tarn’. Harriet Martineau in her 1855 Complete Guide to the English Lakes invoked the place as the scene of one of Wordsworth’s Excursions to dwell upon the Solitary, and also described the remoteness of the location and the ‘very rough road [that] scrambles up from Langdale, by Wall End, to the upland vale where the single farmhouse is, and the tarn’.The atmospheric effect of the painting is beautifully observed, with the forms of the mountain partly suffused in shadow but with other areas brightly lit as cloud shadows sweep over, and with clefts and exposed rock faces recorded with painstaking attention. Blacklock’s particular mastery in the treatment of mountain landscapes depended in great part on his understanding of the constantly fluctuating quality of light, and here especially the scale and structure of the distant ranges are given volumetric expression by the graduated fall of light. Thus the mountain range seems both massive and distant, but at the same times almost tangible and lending itself to close and detailed scrutiny. Martineau commented on a similar optical ambiguity whereby ‘the Langdale Pikes, and their surrounding mountains seem, in some states of the atmosphere, to approach and overshadow the waters [of Windermere]; and in others to retire, and shroud themselves in cloud land’.Blacklock did not work directly from the motif but instead drew landscape sketches in watercolour which later formed the basis of his studio compositions, or perhaps worked largely from memory. He may in addition have used photographs – probably daguerreotypes which in the 1850s were beginning to be made available by commercial photographers – to remind himself of the broad outlines of his chosen subjects (as may be suggested by the way he treats shadows in his paintings, which sometimes seems reminiscent of photographic images). He did not seek the kind of literal transcription of the forms of the landscape that artists influenced by Ruskin attempted in the period, but sought a quintessential representation of topographical type which might be recognised as a timeless record of a hallowed place, treated with an extraordinary intensity of vision. The Langdale Pikes seem to have had a particular hold on the artist’s imagination, as he painted the range on a number of occasions and from different vantage-points. An earlier work showing Blea Tarn and the Langdale Pikes of 1852 is in the collection of a descendant of the artist, while a painting entitled Esthwaite Water and the Langdale Pikes (although in fact showing Elter Water) was commissioned by William Armstrong [later Lord Armstrong, the Newcastle industrialist and arms manufacturer whose house Cragside near Rothbury was built by the architect Richard Norman Shaw] in 1855. Clearly the Lakeland landscape was enormously important to Blacklock. All his exhibited works were of northern settings, and we may be sure that even during the years that he spent in London he will have made frequent visits to Cumberland, and that he believed himself to have as his essential purpose the representation of a beloved North. Analogy may be made between Blacklock and other European artists who like him felt it was their mission to explore and describe a landscape setting which they had known from earliest childhood, feeling such close personal identity with those places as to amount to obsession. His near contemporary Gustave Courbet (1819-1877) never tired of painting landscape and country life subjects set in Ornans in the Jura Mountains of eastern France, and created an extraordinary and indelible imagery of that region. Likewise, Paul Cézanne (1839-1906) painted series of views of the Mont Sainte-Victoire in his native Provence so as to capture the essential identity of a topography that was to him living and imbued with vital and personal associations. These were all painters for whom the intimate knowledge and long contemplation of a specific locality was a vital requirement for an art to be vital and true, and who found themselves in the representation of places with which they had long association, as if the landscape forms, light and air, which were the object of their art, retained some kind of subliminal resonance of the pattern of their own lives.Blacklock’s last extraordinary surge of creativity was sadly short lived. By the time the present work was painted, he was seriously afflicted by symptoms of the disease that would kill him. In the first place, he suffered from an inflammation of the eyes that would in due course make him partially blind. In November 1855, having become increasingly erratic in his patterns of behaviour, he was placed in the Crichton Royal Mental Institution in Dumfries, and where he died on 12 March 1858 as a result of ‘monomania of ambition and general paralysis’. Interestingly, the Crichton hospital, under the direction of Dr William Browne, had recently introduced therapies to attempt to aid their deranged inmates including drawing, as happened also at the Royal Bethlehem Hospital for the Insane in London during the time that Richard Dadd was incarcerated there, so Blacklock was able intermittently to continue at least to draw to the end of his life. A number of landscape sketches made at the Crichton are reproduced in Maureen Park’s book Art in Madness – Dr W.A.F. Browne’s Collection of Patient Art at Crichton Royal Institution, Dumfries, Dumfries, 2010.The Langdale Pikes above Blea Tarn was painted for the artists’ colourman Charles Roberson, probably to a commission and as a pendant to another work of 1854, The Miller’s Homestead (private collection). Whatever professional difficulties Blacklock may have faced in the years that he lived in London, in the 1850s, after his return to Cumwhitton he began to find himself sought after by a small but discriminating circle of patrons. Roberson himself was a significant figure in the establishment of a progressive school of painting in the middle years of the century, because he supplied artists with a range of new and stronger pigments, often derived in their manufacture from industrial processes, and thus aided the move towards more brightly coloured works which was a characteristic of English painting in the period. A degree of rivalry seems to have come about between Blacklock’s would-be patrons, chronicled in the letters that the artist wrote to the Gateshead metallurgist James Leathart (now held as part of the Leathart Papers, University of British Columbia). Roberson’s two paintings are referred to in a letter to Leathart of 2 June 1854, ‘one the same lake as I am going to do for Mr Armstrong – the other a Millers Homestead – the mill looking over a moor & distant hills they are for Mr Roberson the artists colourman’. In September 1855, just weeks before his final incarceration, Blacklock sent off the Lakeland views that he had made for Armstrong and Leathart, and in doing effectively concluded his professional career.Blacklock is an important and intriguing figure who may be regarded both as a pivot between the early nineteenth-century landscape school and the achievements of Romanticism, and the earnest and obsessive innovations of the Pre-Raphaelite landscape school. Perhaps a vital factor in our understanding and appreciation of the particular character of Blacklock’s art is his knowledge of historic schools of painting. Living in London in the late 1830s and 40s he would have had the opportunity to study the works in the National Gallery. It has been suggested that it was the unveiling of works long concealed under layers of discoloured varnish as a result of Charles Eastlake’s cleaning programme of in the mid-1840s that prompted Blacklock to adopt brighter and more luminous colours. A further possibility is that he made a European tour at some point, seeing for himself works of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and also perhaps making contact with working artists in France or Italy. Only the slightest indication survives of Blacklock’s interest in the work of the Old Masters – in a letter to Leathart of 20 September 1854 he looks forward to hearing about the works of art that the latter had seen in the course of a Continental tour. Nonetheless, broad stylistic analogies may be drawn between the landscape paintings of Blacklock and those of other British artists who had visited Europe in their formative years. William Dyce, for example, who had visited Italy in 1825-26 and there made contact with the German Nazarene painters in Rome. Something of the clarity of light and simplicity of expression, along with a particular feeling for colour effects which are peaceful and never strident, that characterises Dyce’s pure landscapes, is also infused into the less well known works of Blacklock, and may perhaps likewise be indebted to a knowledge of European schools of painting.Christopher Newall

Lot 114

A Royal Worcester octagonal dish, with blue scale ground and panels of floral sprays, puce printed mark. Width 4.25 ins.

Lot 128

Worcester lozenge shaped dish circa 1770 painted with a central floral spray within blue scale border, scrolled `W` mark, (hairline to rim) also a Worcester facetted teapot and cover painted with Kakiemon type pattern (restuck) also a Newhall pattern 446 sucrier, (handle restuck) (5)

Lot 131

Worcester coffee cup and saucer circa 1770 painted with floral sprays within a red line border, also a Samson Paris cup and saucer after the Worcester originals painted with exotic birds within a blue scale ground, (crescent marks to the second cup and saucer) (4)

Lot 178

Pair of Graingers vases decorated in the style of first period Worcester with exotic birds on blue scale grounds, gilt printed mark to one base mid 19th century (missing covers) (2) 21cm high

Lot 96

A tinplate toy scale, 19th century with advertising packets, boxes, miniature Guiness bottle, stone and china jars and other items from a child`s shop

Lot 125

An English made table mangle, boxed porcelain tea set, wooden dresser, dressing table, wardrobe, etc for a large scale dolls house. With a boxed washday set

Lot 134

A prisoner of war glass topped straw work box containing a blown clear glass decanter and three goblets with a smaller jug with stopper and four glasses and two smaller scale decanters. Tallest 2 1/2in. All early 19th century. English

Lot 144

A red blown glass decanter with two matching goblets, soda syphon, part set of painted milk glass tableware and a larger scale pale blue glass chicken on a basket

Lot 285

An Official Model Replica of the Vauxhall Velox 1/18 scale. Product of Victory Industries, Guildford. Produced and distributed in collaboration with Vauxhall Motors Luton. With top of original box - Mighty Midget Motor

Lot 484

A Continental white metal filigree card case of rectangular form decorated with whorls within a scale border, together with another similar card case decorated with floral roundels.

Lot 1026

A Victorian oak Admiral Fitzroys storm stick barometer, the arched enamel dial with vernier scale and inscribed `Negretti & Zambra, London`, the trunk fitted with a mercury thermometer above a moulded rectangular cistern cover and moulded apron, height approx 102cm.

Lot 1047

A late Victorian oak stick barometer, the ivorine dial with mercury thermometer, vernier scale and inscribed `Negretti & Zambra`, the case with arch top above a visible tube and turned cistern cover, height approx 90cm.

Lot 1090

A late 20th Century mahogany marine stick barometer, the brass dial with vernier scale, enclosed by a hinged door fitted with an alcohol thermometer, the bowfront case with moulded pediment and brass cistern cover, together with brass gimbal mount.

Lot 65

A 19th century French ormolu mounted marble thermometer, with ivory scale, 10.5ins

Lot 445

A 1st period Worcester scale blue mug, decorated with exotic birds, seal mark, 3.5ins

Lot 573

A 19th century inlaid mahogany stick barometer, with arched top and silvered brass scale, 3ft 3ins

Lot 574

A George III mahogany stick barometer by Watkins of London, arched top above an engraved brass scale and turned wood cistern cover, 3ft

Lot 576

A Victorian rosewood stick barometer by Chapman of Westminster, with ivory scale and thermometer, 3ft

Lot 3051

A collection of Armour 1-100 scale die-cast fighter aircraft, including an F-15 Eagle, a Tornado, an FJ-3 Fury and an F-18 Hornet, all within plastic cases.

Lot 3217

Two Imai 1/100th scale Spanish galleon model kits, a pirate ship and four other model boat kits, all boxed (boxes creased, torn and scuffed).

Lot 52

A large quantity of Bentley related items to include radiator shell for a 3 litre black label, front bar with Bentley drivers club badge and Alvis owners badge, silk handkerchief marked Metropolitan Police School Hendon, with various signatures and Bentley related decoration, fine cast metal products, historical cars 1:24 scale model of a 1928 Bentley Le Mans 4.5 litre, quantity of assorted books and ephemera comprising Rolls Royce service manual 1970 Silver Wraith, Silver Dawn Mark Six and Phantom Mark Four, Bentley 50 year guide of the mark by Johnny Green, racing history of Bentley 1920-1931 by Darrell Berthon, signed and inscribed to Ena and Ken Frith with Love, Darrell Berthon, `Motoring My Way` by Stanley Sedgwick, `The How and Where of the 8 Litre Bentley` by S Sedgwick, `All The Pre-war Bentley`s as New` by S Sedgwick, `R-type Continental` by S Sedgwick, `Where Have All the Blowers Gone` by S Sedgwick, `20 Years of Crewe Bentley 1946-1965` by BDC, `A Brief Guide to Rolls Royce and Bentley Cars 1925-1955`, `My Wife and My Cars` by WO Bentley, `Bentleys Centenary 1885-1985`, also a large Perspex winged bee emblem and a picture of 1936 era Remus type-BRA, first impression limited edition of 500 dated February `69, framed and glazed, formally the property of Mr Ken Frith, who was the regional chairman of the North Western group of Bentley drivers club and a member of the Alvis owners club and well known within the Bentley collectors societies (illustrated)

Lot 450

An 18ct gold cased Omega Constellation automatic chronometer wristwatch with silvered dial and replaced leather strap, also a further Omega automatic wristwatch, in unmarked yellow metal case, with later scale effect leather strap (2) (illustrated)

Lot 10

An ebony and lacquered brass navigational octant Gray & Keen, Liverpool, early 19th century The 10 inch diameter frame inset with ivory scale and signature plaque GRAY & KEEN. STRAND. LIVERPOOL the pivoted brass arm incorporating vernier aperture and angled mirror, with fixed pinhole sights and pivoted filters, 30cm high, in original oak box.

Lot 15

A brass and black japanned eidograph Stanley, London, early 20th century The 30 inch beam calibrated 85-0 with vernier scale, locking screw and signed STANLEY, LONDON to the central pivot, with pulleys connected by tension cables to each end engaging via similar vernier sockets to their respective similarly calibrated adjustable arms fitted with attachments for transposing lines onto paper, in original fitted mahogany box (some accessories lacking) 95.5cm long; with two boxed patinated brass parallel roller rules, each signed A.G. THORNTON LTD, MANCHESTER and in original mahogany boxes, (3).

Lot 16

A brass and black japanned eidograph Stanley, London, early 20th century The 30 inch beam calibrated 85-0 with vernier scale, locking screw and signed STANLEY, LONDON to the central pivot, with pulleys connected by tension cables to each end engaging via similar vernier sockets to their respective similarly calibrated adjustable arms fitted with attachments for transposing lines onto paper, in original fitted mahogany box (some accessories lacking) 95.5cm long; with a boxed patinated brass parallel roller ruler, signed A.G. THORNTON LTD, MANCHESTER and in original mahogany box and two pivoted parallel rulers, (4).

Lot 17

A brass and phosphor bronze eidograph Joseph Casartelli, Manchester, late 19th century The 3 foot beam calibrated 90-0-90 with vernier scale, locking screw and signed J CASARTELLI, 43 Market St., MANCHESTER to the central pivot, with cast pulleys connected by tension cables to each end engaging via similar vernier sockets to their respective similarily calibrated adjustable arms fitted with attachments for transposing lines onto paper, in original fitted mahogany box pasted with instructions and label PEMBERTON COLLI... WIGAN to inside of lid, the box 106cm long. Provenance: Private collection Gloucestershire, previously supplied to the Pemberton Colliery, Wigan. Joseph Casartelli is recorded in Clifton, Gloria Directory of British Scientific Instrument Makers 1550-1851 as working from 43 Market Street, Manchester 1851-95. The eidograph was invented by William Wallace, Professor of Mathematics at Edinburgh University in 1821 as an improvement over the pantograph. The connected pulleys ensure that both arms of the mechanism remain parallel and the vernier scales allow accurate scaling of the facsimile.

Lot 19

A mahogany, iron and cast brass laboratory mirror galvanometer Leeds & Northrup & Co. Philadelphia, early 20th century The substantial oblong iron case enclosing a rectangular coil applied with a small circular mirror and suspended via wires around a magnet, behind cast brass glazed cover inscribed in relief LEEDS & NORTHRUP CO. SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS PHILADELPHIA 67690, mounted onto mahogany panel with three electrical connection posts to front and trade label to underside, with cast iron triform stand on adjustable feet, 46cm high; with a reflecting galvanometer scale with translucent paper scale calibrated from 320-0-320 mounted within glazed mahogany surround and supported via sliding collars on two cylindrical uprights, the rectangular base applied with maker`s nameplate NADLER BRO`s & Co., Westminster and ivorine retailer`s plaque for PHILIP HARRIS & Co. Ltd and with light tube applied to a black painted metal shade to one side (light focussing lens and lamp lacking), 61cm wide. Provenance: Private collection Gloucestershire. The mirror galvanometer was devised in order to obtain the most accurate readings possible. By using reflected light against a separate scale to indicate deflection, errors that may come about due to the deflection having to operate a pointer with mass (albeit compensated) can be eradicated.

Lot 20

A collection of laboratory liquid thermometers Various makers, early 20th century Comprising ten with glass-encased Centigrade scales some signed GRIFFIN & GEORGE LTD, the largest 43cm long; five total immersion examples with centigrade scales, the longest 30cm; and two others; with three glass hydrometers, each with either lead shot or mercury filled counterweight beneath float and glass encased paper scale, (20). Provenance: Private collection, Gloucestershire.

Lot 21

A rare Victorian brass and opaque glass maximum/minimum thermometer Callaghan, London, late 19th century The opaque glass Fahrenheit scale plate applied with shaped tube arranged to provide a minimum reading to the inverted scale on the left hand side and maximum reading to the ascending scale to the right, the lower bend of the tube filled with mercury acting against markers inserted within the spirit filled sections, with signature CALLAGHAN & Co. 23A NEW BOND STREET, CORNER OF CONDUIT ST., LONDON to upper margin and supported via turned brass mounting brackets to an oak wall mounting plate, 51cm high. William Callaghan is recorded in Clifton, Gloria Directory of British Scientific Instrument Makers 1550-1851 as trading from 23A New Bond Street 1859-75. This type of maximum/minimum thermometer was invented by James Six (1731-1793) in around 1780 and relies on markers inserted in the tube to remain at the highest position gained by the mercury over a given period, hence a record of the minimum temperature on the inverted scale to the left and highest temperature to the ascending scale on the right can be obtained.

Lot 22

A brass bound mahogany barograph Elliott Bros., London, early 20th century With eight-part vacuum chamber within lacquered brass armature operating inked pointer for the clockwork driven rotating paper-scale lined drum the interior applied with ivorine plaque ELLIOTT BROS, LONDON beneath five panel bevel glazed cover with brass edged top and bottom rails, on ogee moulded base with chart drawer to apron, 36cm wide. Provenance: the base is applied with a brass plaque inscribed ADMIRALTY PRIZE, FOR FIVE FIRST CLASS CERIFICATES ,1905, SUB-LIEUTENANT CUTHBERT D. LONGSTAFF R.N..

Lot 25

A George V silver cased pocket barometer and thermometer J. C. Vickery, London, 1911 The circular silvered register calibrated in inches within rotating altimeter scale to bezel, the centre with curved Fahrenheit thermometer and signed J.C. VICKERY, LONDON, the cylindrical case with shaped thumbpiece to the hinged lid, marks for London 1911, diameter 4.7cm.

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