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Lot 233

An Edwardian Mahogany Dining Table, the table being wind out with an extra leaf on cabriole legs and castors, approx. 148 (extended length) x 104 x 76 cms.

Lot 234

An Oval Mahogany Extending Dining Table; the table being on a central support comprising four turned columns and four splayed feet and castors

Lot 236

A Square Mahogany Occasional Table

Lot 238

A Lady`s White French Style Dressing Table; the table having a triple folding mirror together with a matching stool, approx. 123 x 63 x 132 cms.

Lot 239

A Victorian Mahogany Drop Leaf Dining Table, approx. 102 x 136 x 69 cms.

Lot 266

Moorcroft column stick and a table lamp shade. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 316

Silver manicure set and four dressing table accessories. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 317

Dressing table clock brass frame supporting three glass panels. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 365

Indian brass top table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 366

Mahogany chest of drawers, oval coffee table, jardinier stand and corner cabinet. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 370

Teak corner cabinet and a pine gate-leg table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 372

Reproduction mahogany side table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 376

Edwardian centre table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 390

Reproduction mahogany drop-leaf table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 393

19th century mahogany fold-over pedestal card table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 397

Edwardian mahogany centre table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 407

Poke work jardinier, cabriole leg stool and coffee table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 408

Triangular drop-leaf tble, heavily carved centre table and plate rack. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 413

Edwardian inlaid tub chair and occasional table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 414

Oak refectory table 93.5" x 39" approximately. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 420

Victorian walnut table top with chess board top fitted on later base. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 421

Vernis Martin table ambulant. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 426

Edwardian side-table with inset leather. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 429

Mahogany and inlaid side table of Edwardian style with single drawer on taper legs. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 433

Mahogany oak gate-leg table Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 437

Victorian black lacquered tilt-top table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 446

Oak barley-twist table and four chairs. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 448

19th century oak tripod table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 459

Empire style brass and black glass circular table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 482

Reproduction mahogany twin-pedestal extending dining table and six chairs with wheatsheaf decoration. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 497

Teak garden seat and table. Condition report: see terms and conditions

Lot 501

"Chinese miniature altar table, inlaid metal scrolls to legs, remains of Republic label to underside, 25.5cm max. "

Lot 718

"Three Masonic collapsible wooden rostrums, for the Junior Warden, the Senior Warden and the Worshipful Master; three stepped wooden pillars, 85cm high; and a pair of wooden square based table stands with painted terrestrial and celestial globes, 36cm high (8) "

Lot 781

A Val St Lambert cranberry on clear overlay glass decanter & stopper; together with a pair of large glass canoe shape open table salts; and a Stourbridge glass peach bloom ewer (3)

Lot 5

A sterling silver dressing table set; and various toilet bottles

Lot 232

A Pair Of Georgian Silver Table Forks, London 1819 4½ oz

Lot 374

A Cut Glass And Brass Framed Inkwell Together With A Hexagonal Based Table Lamp

Lot 419

An Antique Oak Gate Leg Table On Turned Supports Together With An Edwardian Sideboard Base

Lot 443

A 20th Century Pedestal Extending Dining Table And Set Of Eight Chairs

Lot 444

A Late Victorian Oak Extending Dining Table On Turned Corner Supports Together With Two Inserts

Lot 453

An Early 20th Century Polished Drop Leaf Table Together With Four Chairs

Lot 468

A Victorian Mahogany Pembroke Style Table On Turned Supports

Lot 485

An Early 20th Century Walnut Circular Topped Occasional Table With Wool Work Panel

Lot 488

An Antique Oak Circular Topped Tripod Table

Lot 494

An Early 20th Century Oak Gate Leg Dining Table On Turned Supports And Bulbous Feet

Lot 497

An Antique Mahogany Drop Leaf Occasional Table On Cabriole Supports

Lot 502

An Edwardian Mahogany And Inlaid Two Tier Occasional Table By G Hardy & Co, Manchester

Lot 503

An Antique Oak Drop Leaf Table On Square Tapered Supports

Lot 504

An Early 20th Century Polished Walnut Tilt Top Occasional Table On A Tripod Base

Lot 505

An Early 20th Century Polished Oak Gate Leg Table On Barley Twist Supports

Lot 506

An Antique Oak Cricket Table On Square Supports

Lot 507

An Early 20th Century Polished Oak Gate Leg Table On Barley Twist Supports

Lot 508

A Victorian Mahogany Sutherland Table On Turned Supports

Lot 517

An Edwardian Table Top Glass Display Cabinet

Lot 530

An Unusual Mahogany Cabinet Having A Drop Leaf Table Base And An Upper Portion Of Astrical Glazed Display Cupboard By J Hugh Williams, Bangor Street, Caernarfon

Lot 110

An Early 20th Century Austrian Cold Painted Spelter Camel Table Cigarette Lighter Modelled With An Arab Youth Seated On The Camel Displaying A Rug, With A Further Figure Standing Beside Him, 7 ½” High

Lot 154

A Masons Mandalay Pattern Table Clock Together With A Pair Of Small Cloisonne Lidded Ginger Jars Etc (7)

Lot 160

Two Green Tinted Early 20th Century Dressing Table Sets Together With Further Coloured Glass Ware (Quantity)

Lot 61

British Empire Medal, Military Division, E.II.R. (T/23184602 Dvr. Malcolm T. Bignall, R.A.S.C.), nearly extremely fine B.E.M. London Gazette 22.10.1957 T/23184602 Driver Malcolm Trevor Bignall, 19 Company, Royal Army Service Corps `Driver Bignall was driving a fifty ton transporter carrying a Centurion tank down a steep hill into the village of Hurstbourne Tarrant, when the brakes failed completely. He endeavoured to steer the vehicle into the left hand bank in order to slow its momentum, but owing to the combined weight of the tank and trailer this manoeuvre was unsuccessful. Realising that an accident was now inevitable he ordered his co-driver to jump from the vehicle, whilst he remained at the wheel in an effort to control the vehicle`s passage, but as it gathered speed and momentum the flywheel disintegrated and the flying pieces injured him. Even so he managed to slew the vehicle across the road into a field and avoid the village of Hurstbourne Tarrant. In the resultant crash he received serious injuries. Driver Bignall acted with great courage and with complete disregard for his own safety by remaining at the wheel of his vehicle. His action in bringing the transporter to rest in the way he did undoubtedly saved extensive damage to property and probably saved injuries and loss of life to the population of the village.` The Hurstbourne Hill Incident `A massive tank transporter weighing about 20 tons, carrying a 50-ton Centurion tank from Tidworth to Chilwell, hurtled down Hurstbourne Hill (gradient 1 in 5) on Tuesday, 18th June, at 12:15pm. The brakes failed and the 70-ton mass careered crazily down the hill with the driver, 22-year-old Driver Malcolm Bignall, of the 19th R.A.S.C. Depot, Retford, Nottinghamshire, straining to save it from smashing to pulp the houses at the bottom of the hill. Miraculously he steered the transporter into the left bank, braking it a little, but the vehicle with its massive load continued down the hill, swerving as it did so. At the bottom of the hill it swung hard to the right, parting company with the tank it was carrying, which shot to the left. The lorry and carrier ploughed into the garden of the first house at the bottom of the hill, where a tank trap stopped them from going any further. Driver Bignall, whose right leg was broken and right hip badly damaged, was thrown clear before his lorry came to a halt, facing the way it had come. Bignall told the nurse who attended him: "I did all I could to stop the thing from hitting the houses." The tank, which had broken free of its lashings, careered down the left side of the road, tearing up the road surface, flattening fences and poles, tearing up a huge yew tree and piling it against the nearest house, and completely flattening a newly-built garage in the garden of that house. The co-driver, Driver M. Elliott, was pushed clear by Bignall half-way down the hill. He escaped without injury. For almost the full length of the hill, which is half-a-mile long, pieces of brake drum and wreckage were scattered. The road at the beginning of the line of houses was ripped up and fences and bushes each side flattened as if a bomb had been dropped nearby. When the ambulance and police arrived the scene was utter chaos. Traffic was held up in both directions, parts of the crashed vehicle lay all over the road, telephone wires were strewn about; everyone there appeared dazed. The one person who saw the final frightening scene, when the army lorry, transporter, and its Centurion tank load broke apart, was Mr. John Powell, the landlord of the George and Dragon, Hurstbourne Tarrant. "I heard that tanks were coming through Andover. I half expected an accident, knowing that the hot day would melt the brake fluid and make it pretty difficult for anything of that size to come down that hill. I was outside when it happened. As soon as I saw it out of control I dashed back to telephone the police. I did not wait to see what would eventually happen." When Mr. Powell got back to his house he told his wife and she bundled her nanny, 22-year-old nurse Miss Eileen Downing, into a car and they drove to the crash. "I went to tend the driver who was beside his lorry," said Eileen Downing. "I washed his face, cleaned the facial and shoulder lacerations, and put a disinfected compress on his broken leg. It was only after I had done this that I recognised him. I told him that I knew his mother, father, and wife- they live in London near where I used to work- but he did not recognise me. The last time I saw him was last Christmas." A doctor was called from a nearby surgery and arrived with the ambulance. He treated Driver Bignall, then Bignall was driven to Tidworth Military Hospital with his co-driver, Elliott.` Mr. and Mrs. Thompson, who are the owners of the house on the right-hand side of the road where the tank came to rest, were away for the day. They moved into this house, The Limes, a few months ago. Now a 50-ton tank lies on top of their new garage, built two months ago.` (Andover Advertiser, 21.6.1957 refers). Gift from the Village After the accident the Rev. K.M.C. Melrose, vicar of Hurstbourne Tarrant, visited Bignall in hospital. Thinking that the villagers owed the driver a debt of gratitude, he appealed to his flock for a gift: `They eagerly responded, and before the end of Bignall`s first week in hospital he was presented with an inscribed table lamp and a gift voucher.` (Andover Advertiser, 25.10.1957 refers). View Terms & Conditions

Lot 357

A PAIR OF BRASS AND FAUX GREEN MARBLE TABLE LAMPS

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