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Lot 280

A BAG OF ASSORTED SILVER AND WHITE METAL JEWELLERY, to include a white metal diamond cluster ring, of a flower shape, set with single cut diamonds, tapered shoulders, engraved to the inside 'With Love', stamped '925', ring size P, a white metal marcasite ring stamped 'Silver', a white metal colourless paste and blue sapphire set cluster ring, stamped 'Silver', a white metal ring set with an emerald cut blue paste, stamped 'Silver', a silver gilt synthetic blue sapphire and colourless cubic zirconia cluster ring, hallmarked silver Birmingham, ring size O, a white metal and blue cabochon stone set brooch, two white metal pendant necklaces, a white metal curb link chain, and a white metal and cultured pearl line bracelet fitted with a hook clasp, some with marks to indicate silver

Lot 28

TWO 9CT YELLOW GOLD, GEM SET PENDANTS, the first of a rectangular design, set with a rectangular cut pink stone assessed as morganite, within a single cut diamond surround, fitted with a tapered bail, hallmarked 9ct gold Birmingham, length 18mm, the second designed with a six-claw set synthetic ruby, fitted with a tapered bail, hallmarked 9ct gold Birmingham, length 19mm, approximate gross weight 4.1 grams

Lot 269

A 9CT GOLD THREE STONE TOURMALINE DRESS RING, designed with three oval cut, green stones assessed as tourmaline, measuring 3.1mm x 1.0mm, each within a four-claw setting, plain polished band, hallmarked 9ct gold Birmingham, ring size P, approximate gross weight 2.9 grams

Lot 602

THREE BOXES AND LOOSE METALWARES, CAMERAS, LINENS, LUGGAGE AND SUNDRY ITEMS, to include a vintage 'Frister Star 15' sewing machine, decorative brass and other metalwares, vintage cameras - Voigtlander Vito CLR, Yashica Minister III, Ilford Sporti, carved soap stone vase, French enamel saucepans including a Le Creuset frying pan, a cast iron kitchen scales and weights, brass smokers stand, small suitcase 53cm x 30cm x 16cm, etc (three boxes and loose)

Lot 123

EIGHT SCOTTISH BROOCHES, to include a late Victorian silver oval inlaid blue lace agate brooch, a Malcolm Gray Thistle brooch with central circular citrine, another Malcolm Gray brooch designed as a central oval carnelian within an openwork scrolling surround, a further thistle brooch with orange paste, a star and scallop shaped brooch set with orange paste and inlaid with blue lace agate and blood stone (many inlaid pieces missing), a circular brooch with central large paste, a sword and shield brooch and a stag and buckle brooch with the words Si Je Puis (If I Can), lengths 26mm to 63mm, most with hallmarks or marks to indicate silver, approximate total gross weight 158 grams

Lot 809

An early 20th century yellow metal, sapphire and diamond set three stone crossover ring, size L, gross 2.1 grams.

Lot 798

A modern Italian 750 yellow metal and emerald set pendant, 13mm, on a finelink chain, 39cm, gross weight 2.7 grams(stone a.f.).

Lot 787

An 18ct & Pt mounted three stone diamond ring, size O, gross 3.2 grams.

Lot 806

Three modern pairs of 9ct and gem set ear studs, including cabochon blue stone and diamond chip.

Lot 896

A modern 750 yellow metal, tanzanite and diamond chip oval cluster ring, size P, gross weight 9 gramsstone needs re-polishing.

Lot 802

A modern platinum, aquamarine and diamond set three stone dress ring, size N, gross weight 6.8 grams.

Lot 775

A yellow metal and seed pearl spray brooch, 46mm, gross 6.8 grams, a sapphire and diamond set three stone ar brooch, gross 2.3 grams and a gilt metal mounted pendant.

Lot 844

A yellow metal (stamped 14k) and three stone cultured pearl set spray brooch, 55mm, gross 5.2 grams.

Lot 865

A 9ct gold and single stone diamond set 'knot' ring, size P, gross 3.3 grams.

Lot 576

A large collection of paste and gem stone cabochons and other shapes

Lot 629

Diane Low (1911-1975), oil on board, Landscape with Chapel Bank, Stone-in-Oxney, signed and dated '65, 19 x 28cm

Lot 790

A yellow metal and graduated five stone split pearl half hoop ring, size R, gross weight 3.8 grams.

Lot 805

An Edwardian 18ct gold, three stone sapphire and diamond chip set ring, size R, gross weight 3.1 grams.

Lot 776

A pre-Columbian? yellow metal bird pendant, 6.2 grams, 30mm and various stone beads.

Lot 795

Two modern 9ct white gold and diamond set rings including a seven stone half hoop and a white metal and diamond chip set half eternity ring, gross 6.9 grams.

Lot 824

An early 20th century 18ct, three stone rose cut diamond and two stone olivine? set half hoop ring, size N/O, gross 3.5 grams.

Lot 811

A yellow metal and graduated seven stone diamond set half hoop ring, size O and one other solitaire diamond set ring, gross 6.2 grams.

Lot 64

A reconstituted stone Campana garden urn on associated plinth base, Diam.60cm H.106cm

Lot 23

Two pairs of 925 silver earrings including stone set example, combined 13g. P&P Group 1 (£14+VAT for the first lot and £1+VAT for subsequent lots)

Lot 42

Swarovski stone set bangle. P&P Group 1 (£14+VAT for the first lot and £1+VAT for subsequent lots)

Lot 121

PEDESTALS, a collection of five, 38cm x 38cm x 94cm H at largest various sizes, assimilated stone. (5)

Lot 162

A silver plated brooch with red stone

Lot 219

A 9ct gold white stone eternity ring size N 1/4

Lot 260

The ex-Tim Rose-Richards/Cecil Randall1929 Lagonda 2-Litre 'Low Chassis' TourerRegistration no. PK 9201Chassis no. 9411Footnotes:THE FORSHAW COLLECTIONThe remarkable family of low-chassis 2-Litre Lagonda sports cars offered here from the Forshaw Collection reflects the early background of their very well-known and highly-respected Aston Service Dorset business, in the 1930s when Ivan Forshaw made his name as a Lagonda specialist. He was instrumental in establishing the 2-Litre Lagonda Register and later involved in its amalgamation with the Lagonda Club, becoming spares and technical advisor. Ivan and his wife Enid established their home in Parkstone, Dorset. They had two sons, Roger in 1940 and Richard in 1946. When World War 2 began Ivan joined the Army, initially as a dispatch rider, rising through the ranks and seeing service in North Africa and Italy before being invalided out in 1945. Postwar he resumed business and when Aston Martin and Lagonda merged in 1947 the new company passed enquiries concerning pre-war Lagondas to Ivan Forshaw. When Sir David Brown's ownership of Aston Martin Lagonda Limited ended, sole rights to remanufacture parts for Aston Martin DB2 and DB2/4 models plus the David Brown Lagondas were offered to 'The Captain' and Aston Service Dorset was launched in 1972 to cater for that market. The business continued as officially recognised parts specialists for all models up to and including the DB7 Vantage. Ivan Forshaw passed away in 2006 at the age of 94, and he maintained his lifelong enthusiasm for all things Lagonda right to the end. His family collection of Lagondas - particularly this group of low-chassis 2-Litre Tourer competition cars from the 1929 season - was a particular pride and joy. BONHAMS is privileged to have been entrusted with offering them now to the market - for new generations of collectors and enthusiasts to admire, and to enjoy.THE 'FOX & NICHOLL' AND 'SYNDICATE' 2-LITRE LAGONDAS - 1929 RACING SEASONAt the end of 1928 a syndicate of Waltham and Hertford, Hertfordshire-based racing enthusiasts decided to pool their resources in order to enter long-distance sports car racing seriously in 1929. Those enthusiasts - supported by budding driver Tim Rose-Richards - were Arthur Pollard, George Roberts, Cecil Randall and Bill Edmondson - who was General Metcalfe of Lagonda Cars' solicitor. In February 1929 the General agreed to supply the syndicate with two special competition versions of the 2-Litre model, for £350 each - roughly half price - on condition that they would not be resold for less than £600. The syndicate planned to run the cars in the Brooklands Double-Twelve, the Six Hours, the Ulster Tourist Trophy and, possibly, to enter and run one in the Le Mans 24- Hour race. Lagonda had a paid-for entry at Le Mans and placed it at their new client's disposal. The General also promoted their embryo venture to Shell Oil and KLG Spark Plugs recommending sponsorship. Arthur Fox of the Fox & Nicholl primarily Talbot team had also been campaigning a 2-Litre Lagonda, Fox's own car, and an agreement was reached under which Fox & Nicholl of Tolworth, Surrey, would also prepare the new syndicate's sister Lagondas. The cars arrived at the Fox & Nicholl works at the end of April 1929 which left little time for them to be prepared properly for the Brooklands Double-Twelve race in mid-May. Four cars were provided in all for the syndicate and for Fox & Nicholl, with the fourth being owned by specialist tuner R.R. Jackson. The quartet of 2-Litre cars - now offered in this unique Sale opportunity - were given consecutive UK road registrations, PK 9201, 202, 203 and 204. Amongst them 'PK 9201' and '9202' were to be the syndicate's cars, Fox's was 'PK 9203' and Robin Jackson's 'PK 9204'. These cars were prototypes of the low-chassis 2-Litre with a revised front axle and the dynamo mounted on the nose of the crankshaft as on the Lagonda 3-litre and 16/65 models. Fox & Nicholl's men were amused when the cars were delivered to them without the spacers required to go between the axle and springs at the rear, which left the cars in low-chassis form up front, and 'high-chassis' at the rear. The spacers in fact only arrived in time for the second practice session of the Double-Twelve at Brooklands - until which point the paddock habitués there were highly intrigued by the Lagondas' peculiar stance...Arthur Fox was a great detail man in his preparation and he ensured his team drivers practised a special start procedure repeatedly pre-race, which paid off as they were flagged away, leading the field. The early race laps had to be completed with hoods raised, and again Fox's attention to detail equipped the hoods with spring loaded clips to assist in each one's furling and being made secure. The syndicate cars and Fox's entry had a windscreen which could be hinged open and locked near-horizontal as a deflector, presenting less frontal area to the airstream yet deflecting it more efficiently than a simple aero-screen around the driver's head and shoulders. Jackson's 'PK 9204' lacked that feature, using a plain aero screen and wire-mesh stone screen instead. The cars were in fact lightened and modified in many other subtle ways as detailed in the wonderful Lagonda history by Arnold Davey and Anthony May ('Lagonda', David & Charles, 1978). Furthermore Arnold Davey informs us that: 'Dan Hagen, who owned 'PK 9204' from 1938 until 1967, wrote in the Lagonda Club magazine, in 1954, how he had extracted from the factory before the war details of the amount of tuning the 1929 team cars' engines had received, in addition to drastic lightening of the chassis and bodywork. The camshafts were lighter and carried quick lift, long-dwell cams, The compression ratio was raised to 7.45 to 1, inlet ports honed out to 36 mm, lightened flywheel, 'French type' Zenith triple-diffuser carburettors, enlarged radiator with pressurised system, straight cut bevel axle with 4 to 1 ratio.' Mr Davey adds: 'I doubt if the car would have been sold to the public with that compression ratio, which required a 40% benzole fuel mix to run without detonation. At the time of his writing, the car had done over 250,000 miles...'. For the 1929 Brooklands Double-12 race, driver pairings were: 'PK 9201' - Tim Rose-Richards/Cecil Randall 'PK 9202' - Bill Edmondson/George Roberts 'PK 9203' - Frank King/Howard Wolfe 'PK 9204' - Robin Jackson/C.A. Broomhall. This split 24-Hour race - leaving the gigantic Motor Course quiet overnight to ease the inhabitants of Weybridge's slumbers - proved to be a contest between supercharged Alfa Romeos and the big Bentleys - while the 2-Litre cars above were outrun by the factory's proxy entry of a 2-Litre for Mike Couper, which proved to be their 200-mile record car. Still all five of these 2-Litre cars were running at the end of the first 12-Hour competition, the four low-chassis cars and Couper's high-chassis 'special'. Starting the cold engines at the start of the second day's racing proved near disaster for the Jackson/Broomhall car which lost nearly an hour before it could be persuaded to fire. Broken exhausts and silencers then afflicted the Fox cars and the Rose-Richards/Randall entry broke its crankshaft. An Alfa Romeo finally won, with Couper's high-chassis 'special' 9th overall and winner of the 2-Litre class, with Edmondson/Roberts 13th overall and class 2nd in 'PK 9202', Jackson/Broomhall in 'PK 9204' 14th overall, class 3rd - and King/Wolfe 18th overall and 6th in class in 'PK 9203'.The syndicate emerged most unhappy about the late entry of Couper in the special Lagonda, and a storm blew up between them and General Metcalfe which took a little time to be resolved amicably. The cars were overhauled at Lagonda's Staines factory, and the ... For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 259

The ex-Robin Jackson/C.A. Broomhall 1929 Lagonda 2-Litre 'Low Chassis' TourerRegistration no. PK 9204Chassis no. 9414Footnotes:THE FORSHAW COLLECTIONThe remarkable family of low-chassis 2-Litre Lagonda sports cars offered here from the Forshaw Collection reflects the early background of their very well-known and highly-respected Aston Service Dorset business, in the 1930s when Ivan Forshaw made his name as a Lagonda specialist. He was instrumental in establishing the 2-Litre Lagonda Register and later involved in its amalgamation with the Lagonda Club, becoming spares and technical advisor. Ivan and his wife Enid established their home in Parkstone, Dorset. They had two sons, Roger in 1940 and Richard in 1946. When World War 2 began Ivan joined the Army, initially as a dispatch rider, rising through the ranks and seeing service in North Africa and Italy before being invalided out in 1945. Postwar he resumed business and when Aston Martin and Lagonda merged in 1947 the new company passed enquiries concerning pre-war Lagondas to Ivan Forshaw. When Sir David Brown's ownership of Aston Martin Lagonda Limited ended, sole rights to remanufacture parts for Aston Martin DB2 and DB2/4 models plus the David Brown Lagondas were offered to 'The Captain' and Aston Service Dorset was launched in 1972 to cater for that market. The business continued as officially recognised parts specialists for all models up to and including the DB7 Vantage. Ivan Forshaw passed away in 2006 at the age of 94, and he maintained his lifelong enthusiasm for all things Lagonda right to the end. His family collection of Lagondas - particularly this group of low-chassis 2-Litre Tourer competition cars from the 1929 season - was a particular pride and joy. BONHAMS is privileged to have been entrusted with offering them now to the market - for new generations of collectors and enthusiasts to admire, and to enjoy.THE 'FOX & NICHOLL' AND 'SYNDICATE' 2-LITRE LAGONDAS - 1929 RACING SEASONAt the end of 1928 a syndicate of Waltham and Hertford, Hertfordshire-based racing enthusiasts decided to pool their resources in order to enter long-distance sports car racing seriously in 1929. Those enthusiasts - supported by budding driver Tim Rose-Richards - were Arthur Pollard, George Roberts, Cecil Randall and Bill Edmondson - who was General Metcalfe of Lagonda Cars' solicitor. In February 1929 the General agreed to supply the syndicate with two special competition versions of the 2-Litre model, for £350 each - roughly half price - on condition that they would not be resold for less than £600. The syndicate planned to run the cars in the Brooklands Double-Twelve, the Six Hours, the Ulster Tourist Trophy and, possibly, to enter and run one in the Le Mans 24- Hour race. Lagonda had a paid-for entry at Le Mans and placed it at their new client's disposal. The General also promoted their embryo venture to Shell Oil and KLG Spark Plugs recommending sponsorship. Arthur Fox of the Fox & Nicholl primarily Talbot team had also been campaigning a 2-Litre Lagonda, Fox's own car, and an agreement was reached under which Fox & Nicholl of Tolworth, Surrey, would also prepare the new syndicate's sister Lagondas. The cars arrived at the Fox & Nicholl works at the end of April 1929 which left little time for them to be prepared properly for the Brooklands Double-Twelve race in mid-May. Four cars were provided in all for the syndicate and for Fox & Nicholl, with the fourth being owned by specialist tuner R.R. Jackson. The quartet of 2-Litre cars - now offered in this unique Sale opportunity - were given consecutive UK road registrations, PK 9201, 202, 203 and 204. Amongst them 'PK 9201' and '9202' were to be the syndicate's cars, Fox's was 'PK 9203' and Robin Jackson's 'PK 9204'. These cars were prototypes of the low-chassis 2-Litre with a revised front axle and the dynamo mounted on the nose of the crankshaft as on the Lagonda 3-litre and 16/65 models. Fox & Nicholl's men were amused when the cars were delivered to them without the spacers required to go between the axle and springs at the rear, which left the cars in low-chassis form up front, and 'high-chassis' at the rear. The spacers in fact only arrived in time for the second practice session of the Double-Twelve at Brooklands - until which point the paddock habitués there were highly intrigued by the Lagondas' peculiar stance...Arthur Fox was a great detail man in his preparation and he ensured his team drivers practised a special start procedure repeatedly pre-race, which paid off as they were flagged away, leading the field. The early race laps had to be completed with hoods raised, and again Fox's attention to detail equipped the hoods with spring loaded clips to assist in each one's furling and being made secure. The syndicate cars and Fox's entry had a windscreen which could be hinged open and locked near-horizontal as a deflector, presenting less frontal area to the airstream yet deflecting it more efficiently than a simple aero-screen around the driver's head and shoulders. Jackson's 'PK 9204' lacked that feature, using a plain aero screen and wire-mesh stone screen instead. The cars were in fact lightened and modified in many other subtle ways as detailed in the wonderful Lagonda history by Arnold Davey and Anthony May ('Lagonda', David & Charles, 1978). Furthermore Arnold Davey informs us that: 'Dan Hagen, who owned 'PK 9204' from 1938 until 1967, wrote in the Lagonda Club magazine, in 1954, how he had extracted from the factory before the war details of the amount of tuning the 1929 team cars' engines had received, in addition to drastic lightening of the chassis and bodywork. The camshafts were lighter and carried quick lift, long-dwell cams, The compression ratio was raised to 7.45 to 1, inlet ports honed out to 36 mm, lightened flywheel, 'French type' Zenith triple-diffuser carburettors, enlarged radiator with pressurised system, straight cut bevel axle with 4 to 1 ratio.' Mr Davey adds: 'I doubt if the car would have been sold to the public with that compression ratio, which required a 40% benzole fuel mix to run without detonation. At the time of his writing, the car had done over 250,000 miles...'. For the 1929 Brooklands Double-12 race, driver pairings were: 'PK 9201' - Tim Rose-Richards/Cecil Randall 'PK 9202' - Bill Edmondson/George Roberts 'PK 9203' - Frank King/Howard Wolfe 'PK 9204' - Robin Jackson/C.A. Broomhall. This split 24-Hour race - leaving the gigantic Motor Course quiet overnight to ease the inhabitants of Weybridge's slumbers - proved to be a contest between supercharged Alfa Romeos and the big Bentleys - while the 2-Litre cars above were outrun by the factory's proxy entry of a 2-Litre for Mike Couper, which proved to be their 200-mile record car. Still all five of these 2-Litre cars were running at the end of the first 12-Hour competition, the four low-chassis cars and Couper's high-chassis 'special'. Starting the cold engines at the start of the second day's racing proved near disaster for the Jackson/Broomhall car which lost nearly an hour before it could be persuaded to fire. Broken exhausts and silencers then afflicted the Fox cars and the Rose-Richards/Randall entry broke its crankshaft. An Alfa Romeo finally won, with Couper's high-chassis 'special' 9th overall and winner of the 2-Litre class, with Edmondson/Roberts 13th overall and class 2nd in 'PK 9202', Jackson/Broomhall in 'PK 9204' 14th overall, class 3rd - and King/Wolfe 18th overall and 6th in class in 'PK 9203'.The syndicate emerged most unhappy about the late entry of Couper in the special Lagonda, and a storm blew up between them and General Metcalfe which took a little time to be resolved amicably. The cars were overhauled at Lagonda's Staines factory, and the sy... For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 258

The ex-Tim Rose-Richards/Hon. Brian Lewis 1929 Le Mans 24-Hour race1929 Lagonda 2-Litre 'Low Chassis' TourerRegistration no. PK 9203Chassis no. 9413Footnotes:THE FORSHAW COLLECTIONThe remarkable family of low-chassis 2-Litre Lagonda sports cars offered here from the Forshaw Collection reflects the early background of their very well-known and highly-respected Aston Service Dorset business, in the 1930s when Ivan Forshaw made his name as a Lagonda specialist. He was instrumental in establishing the 2-Litre Lagonda Register and later involved in its amalgamation with the Lagonda Club, becoming spares and technical advisor. Ivan and his wife Enid established their home in Parkstone, Dorset. They had two sons, Roger in 1940 and Richard in 1946. When World War 2 began Ivan joined the Army, initially as a dispatch rider, rising through the ranks and seeing service in North Africa and Italy before being invalided out in 1945. Postwar he resumed business and when Aston Martin and Lagonda merged in 1947 the new company passed enquiries concerning pre-war Lagondas to Ivan Forshaw. When Sir David Brown's ownership of Aston Martin Lagonda Limited ended, sole rights to remanufacture parts for Aston Martin DB2 and DB2/4 models plus the David Brown Lagondas were offered to 'The Captain' and Aston Service Dorset was launched in 1972 to cater for that market. The business continued as officially recognised parts specialists for all models up to and including the DB7 Vantage. Ivan Forshaw passed away in 2006 at the age of 94, and he maintained his lifelong enthusiasm for all things Lagonda right to the end. His family collection of Lagondas - particularly this group of low-chassis 2-Litre Tourer competition cars from the 1929 season - was a particular pride and joy. BONHAMS is privileged to have been entrusted with offering them now to the market - for new generations of collectors and enthusiasts to admire, and to enjoy.THE 'FOX & NICHOLL' AND 'SYNDICATE' 2-LITRE LAGONDAS - 1929 RACING SEASONAt the end of 1928 a syndicate of Waltham and Hertford, Hertfordshire-based racing enthusiasts decided to pool their resources in order to enter long-distance sports car racing seriously in 1929. Those enthusiasts - supported by budding driver Tim Rose-Richards - were Arthur Pollard, George Roberts, Cecil Randall and Bill Edmondson - who was General Metcalfe of Lagonda Cars' solicitor. In February 1929 the General agreed to supply the syndicate with two special competition versions of the 2-Litre model, for £350 each - roughly half price - on condition that they would not be resold for less than £600. The syndicate planned to run the cars in the Brooklands Double-Twelve, the Six Hours, the Ulster Tourist Trophy and, possibly, to enter and run one in the Le Mans 24- Hour race. Lagonda had a paid-for entry at Le Mans and placed it at their new client's disposal. The General also promoted their embryo venture to Shell Oil and KLG Spark Plugs recommending sponsorship. Arthur Fox of the Fox & Nicholl primarily Talbot team had also been campaigning a 2-Litre Lagonda, Fox's own car, and an agreement was reached under which Fox & Nicholl of Tolworth, Surrey, would also prepare the new syndicate's sister Lagondas. The cars arrived at the Fox & Nicholl works at the end of April 1929 which left little time for them to be prepared properly for the Brooklands Double-Twelve race in mid-May. Four cars were provided in all for the syndicate and for Fox & Nicholl, with the fourth being owned by specialist tuner R.R. Jackson. The quartet of 2-Litre cars - now offered in this unique Sale opportunity - were given consecutive UK road registrations, PK 9201, 202, 203 and 204. Amongst them 'PK 9201' and '9202' were to be the syndicate's cars, Fox's was 'PK 9203' and Robin Jackson's 'PK 9204'. These cars were prototypes of the low-chassis 2-Litre with a revised front axle and the dynamo mounted on the nose of the crankshaft as on the Lagonda 3-litre and 16/65 models. Fox & Nicholl's men were amused when the cars were delivered to them without the spacers required to go between the axle and springs at the rear, which left the cars in low-chassis form up front, and 'high-chassis' at the rear. The spacers in fact only arrived in time for the second practice session of the Double-Twelve at Brooklands - until which point the paddock habitués there were highly intrigued by the Lagondas' peculiar stance...Arthur Fox was a great detail man in his preparation and he ensured his team drivers practised a special start procedure repeatedly pre-race, which paid off as they were flagged away, leading the field. The early race laps had to be completed with hoods raised, and again Fox's attention to detail equipped the hoods with spring loaded clips to assist in each one's furling and being made secure. The syndicate cars and Fox's entry had a windscreen which could be hinged open and locked near-horizontal as a deflector, presenting less frontal area to the airstream yet deflecting it more efficiently than a simple aero-screen around the driver's head and shoulders. Jackson's 'PK 9204' lacked that feature, using a plain aero screen and wire-mesh stone screen instead. The cars were in fact lightened and modified in many other subtle ways as detailed in the wonderful Lagonda history by Arnold Davey and Anthony May ('Lagonda', David & Charles, 1978). Furthermore Arnold Davey informs us that: 'Dan Hagen, who owned 'PK 9204' from 1938 until 1967, wrote in the Lagonda Club magazine, in 1954, how he had extracted from the factory before the war details of the amount of tuning the 1929 team cars' engines had received, in addition to drastic lightening of the chassis and bodywork. The camshafts were lighter and carried quick lift, long-dwell cams, The compression ratio was raised to 7.45 to 1, inlet ports honed out to 36 mm, lightened flywheel, 'French type' Zenith triple-diffuser carburettors, enlarged radiator with pressurised system, straight cut bevel axle with 4 to 1 ratio.' Mr Davey adds: 'I doubt if the car would have been sold to the public with that compression ratio, which required a 40% benzole fuel mix to run without detonation. At the time of his writing, the car had done over 250,000 miles...'. For the 1929 Brooklands Double-12 race, driver pairings were: 'PK 9201' - Tim Rose-Richards/Cecil Randall 'PK 9202' - Bill Edmondson/George Roberts 'PK 9203' - Frank King/Howard Wolfe 'PK 9204' - Robin Jackson/C.A. Broomhall. This split 24-Hour race - leaving the gigantic Motor Course quiet overnight to ease the inhabitants of Weybridge's slumbers - proved to be a contest between supercharged Alfa Romeos and the big Bentleys - while the 2-Litre cars above were outrun by the factory's proxy entry of a 2-Litre for Mike Couper, which proved to be their 200-mile record car. Still all five of these 2-Litre cars were running at the end of the first 12-Hour competition, the four low-chassis cars and Couper's high-chassis 'special'. Starting the cold engines at the start of the second day's racing proved near disaster for the Jackson/Broomhall car which lost nearly an hour before it could be persuaded to fire. Broken exhausts and silencers then afflicted the Fox cars and the Rose-Richards/Randall entry broke its crankshaft. An Alfa Romeo finally won, with Couper's high-chassis 'special' 9th overall and winner of the 2-Litre class, with Edmondson/Roberts 13th overall and class 2nd in 'PK 9202', Jackson/Broomhall in 'PK 9204' 14th overall, class 3rd - and King/Wolfe 18th overall and 6th in class in 'PK 9203'.The syndicate emerged most unhappy about the late entry of Couper in the special Lagonda, and a storm blew up between them and General Metcalfe which took a little time to be resolved amicably. The cars were overhauled at Lagond... For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 261

The ex-Bill Edmondson/George Roberts1929 Lagonda 2-Litre 'Low Chassis' TourerRegistration no. PK 9202Chassis no. 9412Footnotes:THE FORSHAW COLLECTIONThe remarkable family of low-chassis 2-Litre Lagonda sports cars offered here from the Forshaw Collection reflects the early background of their very well-known and highly-respected Aston Service Dorset business, in the 1930s when Ivan Forshaw made his name as a Lagonda specialist. He was instrumental in establishing the 2-Litre Lagonda Register and later involved in its amalgamation with the Lagonda Club, becoming spares and technical advisor. Ivan and his wife Enid established their home in Parkstone, Dorset. They had two sons, Roger in 1940 and Richard in 1946. When World War 2 began Ivan joined the Army, initially as a dispatch rider, rising through the ranks and seeing service in North Africa and Italy before being invalided out in 1945. Postwar he resumed business and when Aston Martin and Lagonda merged in 1947 the new company passed enquiries concerning pre-war Lagondas to Ivan Forshaw. When Sir David Brown's ownership of Aston Martin Lagonda Limited ended, sole rights to remanufacture parts for Aston Martin DB2 and DB2/4 models plus the David Brown Lagondas were offered to 'The Captain' and Aston Service Dorset was launched in 1972 to cater for that market. The business continued as officially recognised parts specialists for all models up to and including the DB7 Vantage. Ivan Forshaw passed away in 2006 at the age of 94, and he maintained his lifelong enthusiasm for all things Lagonda right to the end. His family collection of Lagondas - particularly this group of low-chassis 2-Litre Tourer competition cars from the 1929 season - was a particular pride and joy. BONHAMS is privileged to have been entrusted with offering them now to the market - for new generations of collectors and enthusiasts to admire, and to enjoy.THE 'FOX & NICHOLL' AND 'SYNDICATE' 2-LITRE LAGONDAS - 1929 RACING SEASONAt the end of 1928 a syndicate of Waltham and Hertford, Hertfordshire-based racing enthusiasts decided to pool their resources in order to enter long-distance sports car racing seriously in 1929. Those enthusiasts - supported by budding driver Tim Rose-Richards - were Arthur Pollard, George Roberts, Cecil Randall and Bill Edmondson - who was General Metcalfe of Lagonda Cars' solicitor. In February 1929 the General agreed to supply the syndicate with two special competition versions of the 2-Litre model, for £350 each - roughly half price - on condition that they would not be resold for less than £600. The syndicate planned to run the cars in the Brooklands Double-Twelve, the Six Hours, the Ulster Tourist Trophy and, possibly, to enter and run one in the Le Mans 24- Hour race. Lagonda had a paid-for entry at Le Mans and placed it at their new client's disposal. The General also promoted their embryo venture to Shell Oil and KLG Spark Plugs recommending sponsorship. Arthur Fox of the Fox & Nicholl primarily Talbot team had also been campaigning a 2-Litre Lagonda, Fox's own car, and an agreement was reached under which Fox & Nicholl of Tolworth, Surrey, would also prepare the new syndicate's sister Lagondas. The cars arrived at the Fox & Nicholl works at the end of April 1929 which left little time for them to be prepared properly for the Brooklands Double-Twelve race in mid-May. Four cars were provided in all for the syndicate and for Fox & Nicholl, with the fourth being owned by specialist tuner R.R. Jackson. The quartet of 2-Litre cars - now offered in this unique Sale opportunity - were given consecutive UK road registrations, PK 9201, 202, 203 and 204. Amongst them 'PK 9201' and '9202' were to be the syndicate's cars, Fox's was 'PK 9203' and Robin Jackson's 'PK 9204'. These cars were prototypes of the low-chassis 2-Litre with a revised front axle and the dynamo mounted on the nose of the crankshaft as on the Lagonda 3-litre and 16/65 models. Fox & Nicholl's men were amused when the cars were delivered to them without the spacers required to go between the axle and springs at the rear, which left the cars in low-chassis form up front, and 'high-chassis' at the rear. The spacers in fact only arrived in time for the second practice session of the Double-Twelve at Brooklands - until which point the paddock habitués there were highly intrigued by the Lagondas' peculiar stance...Arthur Fox was a great detail man in his preparation and he ensured his team drivers practised a special start procedure repeatedly pre-race, which paid off as they were flagged away, leading the field. The early race laps had to be completed with hoods raised, and again Fox's attention to detail equipped the hoods with spring loaded clips to assist in each one's furling and being made secure. The syndicate cars and Fox's entry had a windscreen which could be hinged open and locked near-horizontal as a deflector, presenting less frontal area to the airstream yet deflecting it more efficiently than a simple aero-screen around the driver's head and shoulders. Jackson's 'PK 9204' lacked that feature, using a plain aero screen and wire-mesh stone screen instead. The cars were in fact lightened and modified in many other subtle ways as detailed in the wonderful Lagonda history by Arnold Davey and Anthony May ('Lagonda', David & Charles, 1978). Furthermore Arnold Davey informs us that: 'Dan Hagen, who owned 'PK 9204' from 1938 until 1967, wrote in the Lagonda Club magazine, in 1954, how he had extracted from the factory before the war details of the amount of tuning the 1929 team cars' engines had received, in addition to drastic lightening of the chassis and bodywork. The camshafts were lighter and carried quick lift, long-dwell cams, The compression ratio was raised to 7.45 to 1, inlet ports honed out to 36 mm, lightened flywheel, 'French type' Zenith triple-diffuser carburettors, enlarged radiator with pressurised system, straight cut bevel axle with 4 to 1 ratio.' Mr Davey adds: 'I doubt if the car would have been sold to the public with that compression ratio, which required a 40% benzole fuel mix to run without detonation. At the time of his writing, the car had done over 250,000 miles...'. For the 1929 Brooklands Double-12 race, driver pairings were: 'PK 9201' - Tim Rose-Richards/Cecil Randall 'PK 9202' - Bill Edmondson/George Roberts 'PK 9203' - Frank King/Howard Wolfe 'PK 9204' - Robin Jackson/C.A. Broomhall. This split 24-Hour race - leaving the gigantic Motor Course quiet overnight to ease the inhabitants of Weybridge's slumbers - proved to be a contest between supercharged Alfa Romeos and the big Bentleys - while the 2-Litre cars above were outrun by the factory's proxy entry of a 2-Litre for Mike Couper, which proved to be their 200-mile record car. Still all five of these 2-Litre cars were running at the end of the first 12-Hour competition, the four low-chassis cars and Couper's high-chassis 'special'. Starting the cold engines at the start of the second day's racing proved near disaster for the Jackson/Broomhall car which lost nearly an hour before it could be persuaded to fire. Broken exhausts and silencers then afflicted the Fox cars and the Rose-Richards/Randall entry broke its crankshaft. An Alfa Romeo finally won, with Couper's high-chassis 'special' 9th overall and winner of the 2-Litre class, with Edmondson/Roberts 13th overall and class 2nd in 'PK 9202', Jackson/Broomhall in 'PK 9204' 14th overall, class 3rd - and King/Wolfe 18th overall and 6th in class in 'PK 9203'.The syndicate emerged most unhappy about the late entry of Couper in the special Lagonda, and a storm blew up between them and General Metcalfe which took a little time to be resolved amicably. The cars were overhauled at Lagonda's Staines factory, and the sy... For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 12

A boxed set of silver ingots, each inscribed with a different mining company and a speciman stone (each: 24g) (30)

Lot 75

A mixed lot including a mahogany box with lift up top (14cm x 49cm x 18cm), a treen figure of an Owl, a compass in wooden box, Chinese stone figures, polished stones (a lot)

Lot 111

A composition stone abstract sculpture on circular base (43cm x 25cm x 27cm)

Lot 4

A Victorian gilt metal gem set openwork brooch (4cm), a 9ct gold amethyst ring (2.35g) and a yellow metal ring with claret coloured stone (3)

Lot 409

Silver and yellow metal white stone and synthetic sapphire eternity ring, size E, 2.6grs, yellow metal garnet ring stamped 9ct and a foreign yellow metal garnet cluster ring, size F, 2.2 and 1.2grs (3)

Lot 404

9ct gold white and blue stone ring, size G, 2grms

Lot 531

Antique 18ct gold and platinum 5-stone diamond ring. Size L. 1.9 grams.

Lot 538

A pair of jade or similar hard stone cufflinks.

Lot 436

9ct gold ring set with a oval stone. 2.5 grams gross weight. UK size S. Full hallmarks.

Lot 438

A 9ct gold pendant set with opal stone and illusion set diamonds. 1.0 grams.

Lot 439

A 9ct gold pendant set with opal stone and illusion set diamonds. 1.0 grams.

Lot 449

Edwardian 9ct gold pendant set with a peridot and aqua stone. 45mm long. 1.3 grams.

Lot 451

9ct gold ladies ring set with a large amethyst stone. 3.1 grams. UK size O/P. Hallmarks slightly rubbed.

Lot 456

9ct gold ladies sweetheart brooch set with a ruby stone and seed pearls with a base metal pin. UK hallmarks. Total weight 2.2 grams.

Lot 457

9ct gold bar brooch set with an amethyst stone with a base metal pin. Total weight 2.1 grams.

Lot 461

9ct Amethyst and white stone pendant and chain plus two pairs of earrings. 4.8g

Lot 475

Three 9ct gold rings ? white stone cluster UK size O, single white stone size N/O and eternity size R. 5.7g

Lot 515

18ct gold ring set with a large opal stone. UK size Q/R. Total weight 5.8 grams.

Lot 518

A collection of 9ct gold jewellery to include a 9ct gold and diamond chip ring (size T), a 9ct gold loving hearts ring set with Emerald, Ruby and pearls (size O, 1 stone missing) and a 9ct gold heart shaped pendant with CZ stone (3). Total weight 5.0 grams.

Lot 1106

Victorian olive wood book slide, the arched supports with scrolling brass mounts enclosing KPM type porcelain plaques depicting a young female figure in diaphanous veil holding an oil lamp, her arm leaning upon a stone column, retracted W36cm, extended W56cm

Lot 127

An Antique early 20th century Chinese hand carved jade pendant, pendant has a plated and hard stone necklace attached.

Lot 218

A 9ct gold rope style necklace with a 9ct gold and pink stone pendant. [13.47grams]

Lot 373

Ortak silver and enamel earrings, Ortak heart shaped earrings and a pair of blue stone silver earrings

Lot 282

Mixed lot comprising various small pill and trinket boxes to include polished stone examples, turned wooden example, various lacquered finish examples and a further small model turtle, largest 5cm wide (11)

Lot 217

Oriental carved stone figure of heads of deities on square mount, (4)

Lot 329

Group of six various hardwood African tribal carved figures together with a further carved stone figure, largest 23cm high (7)

Lot 276

Mixed lot comprising various small pill and trinket boxes to include floral porcelain examples, plus a further miniature Brazilian polished stone dominoes set and various others, plus a Wedgwood blue elephant example, largest piece 6cm wide (12)

Lot 529

9ct white gold stone set seed pearl dress ring (6.8g)

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