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GEORGE VI SILVER TWO HANDLE ROWING TROPHY CUP part of inscription "Agecroft Regatta June 1938 - Junior Fours etc, 4 1/4" (10.8) makers Addie Brothers, Birmingham 1937, 2.3 ozs together with a 1953 CORONATION COMMEMORATIVE WINE COASTER electroplate with turned oak base centred with a cast silver roundel featuring Royal coat of arms, hallmarked Sheffield 1952, 6" (15.2) diameter (2)
MID 20th CENTURY SILVER TWO HANDLE CROWN GREEN BOWLING TROPHY CUP with scroll handles capped with acanthus leaves inverted trumpet form foot, 8 1/2 " (21.6) high x 10" (24.2) wide over the handles, presentation inscription dated 1943, Birmingham 1931, 23oz and the tiered black plastic plinth applied with winners tablets, 13 1/22 (34.3) high
AN EARLY VICTORIAN SILVER TWO HANDLED TROPHY CUP, the campana shape demi-gadrooned body engraved with presentation inscription 'A Prize Awarded to Mr Michael Wells, Junior, For Ploughing at the age of 17 years, Oct 2nd 1839' with foliated scroll handles, on a circular stem foot by Charles Reily and George Storer, London 1839, 6 1/2oz
A GEORGE V SILVER ARTS AND CRAFTS STYLE TROPHY CUP, engraved 'LICHFIELD HORSE SHOW 1912 PRESENTED BY MRS ARTHUR CHETWYND', some dents and creases, maker Charles Boyton & Sons, Lon don 19011, 7.1ozt, 221 grams, with wooden stand, together with a box of collectables and silver plate, including silver and base metal thimbles, advertising novelties, etc
Original vintage Brands Hatch Racing Racing poster for the Easter Trophy Meeting race held on April 11. Here is a caption from Motor Sports Magazine: The opening meeting of the season was held on April 11 in glorious sunshine. The 500cc runners competed in four heats, the first five from each going forward into the main final. There was a subsidiary final for the second five in each heat and a consolation race for the also-rans. Jim Russell won the main final in a Cooper.Herbert James Russell (28 May 1920 – 30 March 2019), better known as Jim Russell, was an English racing driver, garage owner and founder of the Jim Russell Racing Driver School. He died on 30 March 2019, shortly after undergoing an operation for a hip replacement. Cooper 1953 MK VIIA was designe by Francis Beart, best known as an expert engine tuner, especially Manx Nortons but he also built his own car based on a Mk VII. He received considerable co-operation of the Cooper factory, to the extent that Coopers authorised a specific Mk number for the car, the Mk VIIa. The Beart Cooper was driven by Eric Brandon and Alan Brown and occasionally by Stirling Moss. Later in '53 and '54 it was driven by Stuart Lewis-Evans. The Beart showed Coopers that they could not rest on their laurels and a number of these modifications were adopted by the Cooper factory for the Mk VIII. The car continued to be competitive for an very long period of time, Trevor Taylor taking several wins in 1958. Brands Hatch is a motor racing circuit in West Kingsdown, Kent, England. First used as a grasstrack motorcycle circuit on farmland, it hosted 12 runnings of the Fomula 1 British Grand Prix between 1964 and 1986 and currently hosts many British and International racing events. The venue is owned and operated by Jonathan Palmer's MotorSport Vision organisation. Brands Hatch stands for history and British motor racing at its best. Back in 1925, the first motor-bike races were held at Brands Hatch on a grass circuit. Legends such as Stirling Moss, Jim Clark, James Hunt or Ayrton Senna already celebrated race wins at the time-honoured motor-racing venue. Good condition, folded as issued, staining, small tears and creases in margins. Country: UK, year of printing: 1955, designer: Harry Heath, size (cm): 75.5x51
Original vintage Brands Hatch Motorcycle Racing poster for the race held on September 22, 1963, with a programme including the 500cc Redex Trophy Race with star entries from Derek Minter, Jim Redman, John Hartle and many more. Derek Minter (27 April 1932 – 2 January 2015) was an English Grand Prix motorcycle and short-circuit road racer. A versatile rider, he rode a variety of machinery between 1955 and 1967 at increasing levels of expertise and in varying capacities and classes. His best season was in 1958 when he finished the year in fifth place in the 500 cc World Championship. In 1960, Minter won the North West 200 race in Northern Ireland. In 1962, he won the Isle of Man 250 cc Lightweight TT. Brands Hatch is a motor racing circuit in West Kingsdown, Kent, England. First used as a grasstrack motorcycle circuit on farmland, it hosted 12 runnings of the Fomula 1 British Grand Prix between 1964 and 1986 and currently hosts many British and International racing events. The venue is owned and operated by Jonathan Palmer's MotorSport Vision organisation. Brands Hatch stands for history and British motor racing at its best. Back in 1925, the first motor-bike races were held at Brands Hatch on a grass circuit. Legends such as Stirling Moss, Jim Clark, James Hunt or Ayrton Senna already celebrated race wins at the time-honoured motor-racing venue. Good condition, folded as issued, creases, faint staining in margins. Country: UK, year of printing: 1963, designer: Unknown, size (cm): 75.5x51
Original vintage Brands Hatch Motorcycle Racing poster for the race held on September 22, 1963, with a programme including the 500cc Redex Trophy Race with star entries from Derek Minter, Jim Redman, John Hartle and many more. Derek Minter (27 April 1932 – 2 January 2015) was an English Grand Prix motorcycle and short-circuit road racer. A versatile rider, he rode a variety of machinery between 1955 and 1967 at increasing levels of expertise and in varying capacities and classes. His best season was in 1958 when he finished the year in fifth place in the 500 cc World Championship. In 1960, Minter won the North West 200 race in Northern Ireland. In 1962, he won the Isle of Man 250 cc Lightweight TT. Brands Hatch is a motor racing circuit in West Kingsdown, Kent, England. First used as a grasstrack motorcycle circuit on farmland, it hosted 12 runnings of the Fomula 1 British Grand Prix between 1964 and 1986 and currently hosts many British and International racing events. The venue is owned and operated by Jonathan Palmer's MotorSport Vision organisation. Brands Hatch stands for history and British motor racing at its best. Back in 1925, the first motor-bike races were held at Brands Hatch on a grass circuit. Legends such as Stirling Moss, Jim Clark, James Hunt or Ayrton Senna already celebrated race wins at the time-honoured motor-racing venue. Good condition, folded as issued, faint staining in right margin, creases on fold lines. Country: UK, year of printing: 1963, designer: Unknown, size (cm): 75.5x51
Original vintage Brands Hatch Motorcycle Racing poster for the race held on September 22, 1963, with a programme including the 500cc Redex Trophy Race with star entries from Derek Minter, Jim Redman, John Hartle and many more. Derek Minter (27 April 1932 – 2 January 2015) was an English Grand Prix motorcycle and short-circuit road racer. A versatile rider, he rode a variety of machinery between 1955 and 1967 at increasing levels of expertise and in varying capacities and classes. His best season was in 1958 when he finished the year in fifth place in the 500 cc World Championship. In 1960, Minter won the North West 200 race in Northern Ireland. In 1962, he won the Isle of Man 250 cc Lightweight TT. Brands Hatch is a motor racing circuit in West Kingsdown, Kent, England. First used as a grasstrack motorcycle circuit on farmland, it hosted 12 runnings of the Fomula 1 British Grand Prix between 1964 and 1986 and currently hosts many British and International racing events. The venue is owned and operated by Jonathan Palmer's MotorSport Vision organisation. Brands Hatch stands for history and British motor racing at its best. Back in 1925, the first motor-bike races were held at Brands Hatch on a grass circuit. Legends such as Stirling Moss, Jim Clark, James Hunt or Ayrton Senna already celebrated race wins at the time-honoured motor-racing venue. Good condition, folded as issued, small stains, cracks and creases in margins. Country: UK, year of printing: 1963, designer: Unknown, size (cm): 75.5x51
Original vintage Brands Hatch Motorcycle Racing poster for the Fred Mockford Trophy Meeting held on Brands Hatch circuit, with star entries from Derek Minter, Bob Anderson, world champion John Surtees and many more. John Surtees, CBE (11 February 1934 – 10 March 2017) was an English Grand Prix motorcycle road racer and Formula One driver. He was a four-time 500cc motorcycle World Champion – winning that title in 1956, 1958, 1959 and 1960 – the Formula One World Champion in 1964, and remains the only person to have won World Championships on both two and four wheels. He founded the Surtees Racing Organisation team that competed as a constructor in Formula One, Formula 2 and Formula 5000 from 1970 to 1978. He was also the ambassador of the Racing Steps Foundation. Brands Hatch is a motor racing circuit in West Kingsdown, Kent, England. First used as a grasstrack motorcycle circuit on farmland, it hosted 12 runnings of the Fomula 1 British Grand Prix between 1964 and 1986 and currently hosts many British and International racing events. The venue is owned and operated by Jonathan Palmer's MotorSport Vision organisation. Brands Hatch stands for history and British motor racing at its best. Back in 1925, the first motor-bike races were held at Brands Hatch on a grass circuit. Legends such as Stirling Moss, Jim Clark, James Hunt or Ayrton Senna already celebrated race wins at the time-honoured motor-racing venue. Good condition, folded as issued, faint yellowing and creases in margins. Country: UK, year of printing: 1958, designer: Unknown, size (cm): 75.5x51
Original vintage Brands Hatch Motorcycle Racing poster for the National Open Meeting starring famous riders in The Easter Trophy. Brands Hatch is a motor racing circuit in West Kingsdown, Kent, England. First used as a grasstrack motorcycle circuit on farmland, it hosted 12 runnings of the Fomula 1 British Grand Prix between 1964 and 1986 and currently hosts many British and International racing events. The venue is owned and operated by Jonathan Palmer's MotorSport Vision organisation. Brands Hatch stands for history and British motor racing at its best. Back in 1925, the first motor-bike races were held at Brands Hatch on a grass circuit. Legends such as Stirling Moss, Jim Clark, James Hunt or Ayrton Senna already celebrated race wins at the time-honoured motor-racing venue. Good condition, folded as issued, small tears and creases on fold lines. Country: UK, year of printing: 1955, designer: Unknown, size (cm): 76x50.5
Original vintage Brands Hatch Motorcycle Racing poster for the Fred Mockford Trophy Meeting held on Brands Hatch circuit on Sunday, September 28, 1958, with star entries from Derek Minter, Bob Anderson, world champion John Surtees and many more. John Surtees, CBE (11 February 1934 – 10 March 2017) was an English Grand Prix motorcycle road racer and Formula One driver. He was a four-time 500cc motorcycle World Champion – winning that title in 1956, 1958, 1959 and 1960 – the Formula One World Champion in 1964, and remains the only person to have won World Championships on both two and four wheels. He founded the Surtees Racing Organisation team that competed as a constructor in Formula One, Formula 2 and Formula 5000 from 1970 to 1978. He was also the ambassador of the Racing Steps Foundation. In 1926 motorcycle enthusiasts led by Fred Mockford and Cecil Smith, formed a group called London Motor Sports Ltd, and having identified Crystal Palace Park as a racing venue, were eventually allowed to run a meeting on May 21st 1927 over a 1 mile course of the parks paths. Over 10,000 people turned up to the meeting each paying 1 shilling plus 2d tax (approx. 6p). Following an incident during the meeting, several spectators were injured by a sidecar and questions were asked in Parliament about the incident. By the second meeting £500 had been invested in crash barriers, widening and general improvement of the circuit. Some 16,000 attended this meeting and the scene was set for racing to rival cricket, football, and greyhound racing at the venue. Towards the end of 1927, Lionel Wills (of WD&HO Wills Tobacco) approached Mockford and Smith with a suggestion to try the new Australian sport of speedway at Crystal Palace to supplement the path racing. The football stadium, home of Corinthians football club, was refurbished to provide an oval track at a cost of £5000, and some 30,000 people turned up for the first meeting and within a year some 70 tracks had sprung up throughout the country. In 1929 a league was formed and The Glaziers finished 4th, with Stamford Bridge being champions. By 1934, crowds were falling and having been refused floodlights for evening meetings, Mockford and Smith moved the team to New Cross, and the track fell into disrepair. Speedway was revived in 1937 for the new second division, but they could not recapture the glory days of the Glaziers, or match the 71,311 attendance of the 1930 Easter Monday meeting, and as the war loomed in 1939, speedway came to an end. Rumours in 1935 told of a Donnington for London, but it wasn't until December 1936 that work actually began on a new 2 mile circuit, laid with the new "Panamac" non-skid surface, only 3 days after the disaster which saw the Crystal Palace burn down overnight. The circuit was duly completed in only 5 months, despite being constructed in one of the wettest winters on record this century. The circuit was duly described as "resembling a miniature Nurburgring" by The Motorcycle magazine. The first meeting held at the circuit was on April 24th 1937 and 20 cars were entered in the Coronation Trophy, including the ERA of Raymond Mays plus MGs, Maseratis, Rileys, and Fraser Nash. 3 weeks later motorcycles converged on the Palace, with the first race won by the Norton of Maurice Cann. Cycle racing also arrived in June 1937 with a 100 kilometre International Cup race for professional cyclists including top riders from the continent. On July 17th the London Grand Prix was held and Prince Birabongse appeared in his Romulus ERA R2B eventually winning with a lap record in his heat of 56.47 mph. During the meeting of October 9th, the BBC televised the first ever live motorsport at the International Imperial Trophy meeting which Bira duly won along with a prize fund of £150. At the same meeting Richard Seaman demonstrated the awesome 645 bhp Grand Prix Mercedes Benz W125. Motor racing had arrived and flourished, but with the onset of the war in 1939, the final race was run on 26th August 1939 and was won by Bert Hadley in an Austin. The outright record for the circuit was finally held by Raymond Mays ERA at 60.97 mph. Good condition, folded as issued, minor tears and creases in margins. Country: UK, year of printing: 1958, designer: Unknown, size (cm): 75.5x51
Original vintage Brands Hatch Motorcycle Racing poster for the race held on September 22, 1963, with a programme including the 500cc Redex Trophy Race with star entries from Derek Minter, Jim Redman, John Hartle and many more. Derek Minter (27 April 1932 – 2 January 2015) was an English Grand Prix motorcycle and short-circuit road racer. A versatile rider, he rode a variety of machinery between 1955 and 1967 at increasing levels of expertise and in varying capacities and classes. His best season was in 1958 when he finished the year in fifth place in the 500 cc World Championship. In 1960, Minter won the North West 200 race in Northern Ireland. In 1962, he won the Isle of Man 250 cc Lightweight TT. Brands Hatch is a motor racing circuit in West Kingsdown, Kent, England. First used as a grasstrack motorcycle circuit on farmland, it hosted 12 runnings of the Fomula 1 British Grand Prix between 1964 and 1986 and currently hosts many British and International racing events. The venue is owned and operated by Jonathan Palmer's MotorSport Vision organisation. Brands Hatch stands for history and British motor racing at its best. Back in 1925, the first motor-bike races were held at Brands Hatch on a grass circuit. Legends such as Stirling Moss, Jim Clark, James Hunt or Ayrton Senna already celebrated race wins at the time-honoured motor-racing venue. Good condition, folded as issued, staining, creases on fold lines. Country: UK, year of printing: 1963, designer: Unknown, size (cm): 75.5x51
Silver twin handled lidded trophy raised on moulded circular foot, the foot and lidded with cast rope twist border decoration in relief, three tier finial, scroll handles, the body engraved "Grand Military Gold Cup Sandown Park" with engraved dates and positions to reverse, makers Cohen & Charles, London 1934, height approximately 22cm
Silver chalice of plain polished form raised on circular pedestal foot, knopped stem, makers mark rubbed, hallmarked Birmingham 1940, height approximately 16cm together with a silver twin handled trophy, makers Robert Pringle & Sons, London 1941, height approximately 12cm together with an engraved silver trophy (3)
George III silver twin-handled tray with chased ivy band raised on four slender scroll supports, engraved "Caithness Music Festival Solo Singing (Classical Medal Class) Kathleen Campbell McKenzie Trophy" by John Crouch I and Thomas Hannam London 1796, 56cm x 36cm, approximately 2078g Light surface scratching. Good gauge, clear hallmarks with no dents/repairs
A PAIR OF SILVER MOUNTED OVAL HAIR BRUSHES AND A COLLECTION OF PLATED ITEMS the hair brushes each engraved with a monogram, mark of William Aitken, Birmingham 1920, in a brown leather case; the plated items Include; a Victorian straight-sided christening mug with a loop handle, beaded borders and engraved with bands of trailing ivy; two pint mugs each with n angular handle, tucked-under base on a round foot and engraved 'Notts Rugby Football Club 8 : 10 : 1932'; various trophy cups and a quantity of mostly Old English flatware and a part set of fish eaters
Vintage Watson Sterling Silver Paul Revere Punch Bowl. Inscribed on bottom: Presidents Trophy Bloomfield Hills Country Club September 25th 1940. Signed. appropriately. Measures 6-1/2" H x 13" diameter. Weighs approx. 58.19 troy ounces. Condition: Good condition. Estimate: $800.00 - $1200.00 Domestic Shipping: $105.00
A PAIR OF LATE 19TH CENTURY DANISH SILVER SERVING SPOONS, marks for Simon Groth, Copenhagen 1872; two 19th Century silver tablespoons; a 19th Century silver caddy spoon of shovel form, by Unite & Hilliard, Birmingham 1830; three other spoons; a mother of pearl handled silver butter knife; and a silver twin handled small trophy, London 1912, 13.5oz weighable (qty)
A COLLECTION OF SILVER, comprising a set of four repoussé decorated peppers, Sheffield 1911, cased, a cream jug, a twin handled small trophy, a footed sweetmeat dish, a pair of pierce decorated small dishes, a pair of pierce decorated small dishes, a pair of spill vases (weighted), a cigarette box, a cut glass scent bottle with silver cover, and a pair of Indian white metal bowls, approximately 15oz weighable (qty)
A COLLECTION OF SILVER, comprising a twin handled pedestal trophy, Sheffield 1929, 9.5cm wide, a rectangular cigarette box, presentation inscription, London 1957; two pairs of spill vases, a pair of late Victorian serving spoons, pierced and engraved with foliage, Sheffield 1897, cased, a caddy spoon, a child's spoon and pusher, cased, a set of six bean end coffee spoons, cased, a matched dressing table set, twelve silver handled tea knives, and a plated soup ladle and toast rack (qty)
A rare Lladro porcelain copy of the FIFA World Cup, together with a photograph of England?s most capped player, Peter Shilton, holding the trophy and a signed note of authenticity inscribed, ?I hope you enjoy my only world cup! Best, Peter Shilton.? 35cm high. Provenance: Presented to Peter Shilton by the Spanish FA during the 1982 World Cup in Spain, FIFA commissioned the current world cup after Brazil were awarded the original Jules Rimet Trophy in 1970 for winning the competition for a record third time. The new trophy was designed by Italian sculptor Silvio Gazzaniga, who later designed the current UEFA Cup. The world-renowned Spanish porcelain manufacturer Lladro, in association with Sport Billy productions, were commissioned to make a limited number of presentation copies for the 1982 world cup. The Lladro porcelain copies were never on sale to the public and do not appear in the general Lladro reference book. For another example refer to Christie?s auction, London 15th November 2006, which sold for £4,200.
An original Russian Football poster for a tournament March 25th-29th 1984, lithograph, 84x62cm, together with an album of photographs and postcards of club and international stadiums and trophy rooms etc, various commemorative football newspapers and other ephemera. (From the estate of FA Referee Alan Robinson)
1920s silver two-handled trophy cup of cylindrical form, with flared rim, engraved '54 (East Anglian) Division / District Cookery Competition Territorial Army', on a circular pedestal foot and turned ebonised plinth (London 1922), maker's mark rubbed, together with a small silver plated cup, engraved '2AA Group Inter Brigade Swimming Champions'. Approximately 13ozs weighable silver, silver cup 25.5cm overall height including plinth (2)
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37457 item(s)/page