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A ROYAL WORCESTER CHINA HAND PAINTED TEAPOT, SUGAR BOWL & MILK JUG, fruit decoration, the teapot lid has a floral knop, the teapot a gilded handle & spout, the body signed A.Shuck, the other two items are signed E.Townsend, they both have gilded interiorsCondition report: no chips, cracks or restoration, a few manufacturing blemishes & little to no gilt wear. Does include a tiny tip of gilt wear on the spout though. No crazing, very good overall condition. The teapot is a two pint capacity.
A LATE 18TH CENTURY CHINESE PORCELAIN BULLET FORM TEAPOT, with cover, polychrome painted vase and trophy decoration, the cover with acorn finial, 13cm highCondition report: Cover is good, no chips, cracks or restoration. Pot has no chips or restoration, there are a series of glaze cracks to the pot, around the bottom part of the handle & around the lower part of the body and base of spout. I do not think the cracks are more than glaze cracks. I cannot see evidence of them on the inside of the pot, there are manufacturing blemishes.
A Pennington's Liverpool coffee pot and cover, circa 1780, painted in underglaze blue with an Oriental landscape, another Pennington's teapot and cover, decorated with coloured enamels with exotic birds, another Liverpool tea bowl and saucer, and a Worcester Mansfield pattern bowl (one tray)
A collection of silver, including a teapot, by Mappin & Webb, Birmingham. 1922, 22.5cm wide over handle, a pair of pepperettes, by The Alexander Clark Manufacturing Co. London, 1911, a sauce boat, Birmingham. 1939 and a George III cream jug, marks rubbed, possibly York, gross weight of silver 24oz 16dwt, 768gr (5)
THOMAS HARDY INTEREST: A SILVER PLATED TEAPOT with ivory fittings, inscribed "Used by Thomas Hardy at Max Gate 20 years, and given by Emma Hardy to their Vicar Ri. Grosvenor Bartelot 7 July 1912", with further scratched inscription on the bottom by the recipient, confirming that Mrs Hardy gave the teapot as a momento in 1912.Thomas Hardy was a neighbour at Max Gate and parishioner of Grosvenor Bartelot's for 22 years. Rev. Bartelot attended regular teatimes with Mrs Hardy who was keen for her husband to take a greater interest in the church.Provenance: The Bartelot Family Collection, mostly the property of Rev. Richard Grosvenor Bartelot FSA, Rector of Fordington, Dorchester 1907-1939, or his son Major R St G G Bartelot.Grosvenor Bartelot was born in 1868 and went to Crewkerne Grammar School and Wadham College, Oxford, in the 1880s. In the next two decades he served as curate at Corfe Castle, Anglican chaplain in Turin, and as the Bishop of Salisbury's missioner covering duties of other clergy all over Dorset. He became a noted antiquarian and genealogist and was elected FSA. Having been born a Bartlett, in 1898 he changed his name to the original Norman form, Bartelot. In 1906 he became Vicar of Fordington St George, Dorchester, and next year he married Evelyn, daughter of Alfred Pope Esq of South Court and Wrackleford House, founder of the Eldridge Pope brewery. Having retired in 1936 to Timsbury, Somerset, he died in 1947.
* Teapot. Edwardian silver teapot by Goldsmiths and Silversmiths Company, London 1905, of ogee form with ebony handle and finial on four cabriole supports 25.5cm long, together with six silver napkin rings plus a collection of silver-plated items including four entree dishes and a biscuit box, weighable silver approximately 495gQty: (17)

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165432 item(s)/page