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Lot 2098

Historical DocumentsThe Marchand Archive, 1896-98A very rare selection of fourteen letters and three photographs from the Marchand expedition archive detailing life during this period, all written in French. The Marchand Mission was an expedition undertaken by French emissary Jean-Baptiste Marchand (1863-1934). With a force of twelve Europeans and 150 men, he was sent out by the French Government to help counter British expansionism in northeastern Africa. Starting from Libreville (in present-day Gabon) in 1897, the expedition spent 14 arduous months crossing largely uncharted regions of north central Africa. They finally reached the fort of Fashoda on the upper Nile on July 10, 1898 and hoisted the French flag. On September 18, a flotilla of British gunboats led by Horatio Kitchener arrived at Fashoda; Kitchener had just defeated Mahdi forces at The Battle of Omdurman, and was in the process of reconquering the Sudan in the name of the Egyptian Khedive. The confrontation of the French and British was cordial but both sides insisted on their right to Fashoda. News of the encounter was relayed to Paris and London and each side accused the other of expansionism and aggression. A stalemate (the Fashoda Incident) continued until November 3 when French Foreign Minister Théophile Delcassé, fearing the possibility of war, withdrew Marchand and his troops and ceded the Sudan to the British. This selection of the letters are from different members of the expedition between 1896 and 1898. The letters are written by Jean Marchand 1897 (3 Oct.), 1898 (27 Nov.); Joseph Germain 1896 (2 July) and (21 Aug.); Charles Mangin 1897 (6 Oct.) from The Rapids and with signed studio photograph; Albert Baratier 1897 (31 Aug.); Jules Emily 1897 (8 July); Alfred Dye 1898 (5 Nov.) the transcript follows; Ernest Venail 1898 (15 Feb.) from The Rapids, and (29 Aug.) with studio portrait signed May 1900; Liotard 1897 (21 Jan.).A fascinating and highly desirable group with a lots of background and research information about this remarkable expedition, completed against all odds and a magnificent credit to the detrmination and resourcefulness of these pioneering soldiers. Photo The translation of two letters. "Bahr-el-Ghazal, 30km downstream from the confluence of the Arab Aboard the Faidherbe, 5th November 1898 My dear Largeau! My poor Largeau! What a stand-up we gave you at la mecha, what an annoying stand up. But I think of your worries, of your possible lack of supplies and am sending you a whaleboat with all my wood cutters - which breaks my heart as you can imagine! The Faidherbe has been stopped for six days in the sedd, I am going back to Fachoda, where I must be on the 10th of November, to take orders from the commanding officer Marchand at Khartoum, if need be. In two words I explain you the phantasmagorical dramatic turn of events which completely changed on the high Nile, during our painful journey to Fort Desain. We had left at the time the imminent arrival of another [friend Denriche] to Fachoda. [Tired]! It was not [Denriches] but indeed sirdar Kitchener, with 2.000 men, of which a battalion of highlanders, five big gunboats having on board up to 10 canons. Omderman was taken on September 2nd after a bloody and stupid battle which [Denriches] came to deliver in the plain, instead of staying behind the formidable fortifications of Omderman. My letter, moved, of October 13th to Doctor [ Cureau] that [ Fassinet] must have brought you, as well as my open note of today, to the same, had to teach you what takes place in Ghazal. Judge my bewilderment when I collect, 13 oct, an Egyptian detached flag on Khadija, then the next day a second in Bahr-el-Arab, with papers saying that these detached flags were raised for the officers of the Abon-Klea, one at Mecha, the other one on the lake Ambady!!!! Then I find Sedd in the channel of papyri, 800m of suites and I cross it only at the price of superhuman efforts of my 17 men. 18 [Chilonk] told me that there are two Turkish boats on the Nile, which wait for me to break [(sic)] the boat of the French people! New emotion…. But your good cannon is fixed at the front of the Faidherbe, protected by kegs and sheet steels; the boiler is hardened, I may let come … On the 18th´s evening I find a big Anglo-Egyptian camp in the confluence of Sobat, where these softened of Abyssinian could have been able to settle down 10 times more easily than us at Fachoda! This camp fires two cannon shots at me as a warning; but I take off silently. (It was to give me an order of Kitchener forbidding the war troops and ammunitions transportation on the Nile, as Marchand taught me later. Finally, the 19th at Fachoda, having crossed, peacefully, an Anglo-Eg. Gunboat upstream. There is so much news: the army announced by [Chillonk] was other one than a flying column organized by the sirdar Kitchener, after the fall of Omderman, 2 sept. The Caliph was able to run away, with 130 partisans, in the mountains of [Dar Nouba]. A Few days after the taking of Khartoum, arrive from the top Mahdiste vapour with quantity of wounded persons on board; Anglo-Egyptians seize it and find the hull riddled with bullets which appear to be French. Aoh! Mahdistes prisoners say that they all almost died there, under the fire of the whites of Fachoda. So, from September 11th, a paragraph of "Pt journal", tells in France that the Marchand mission put to flight two Mahdistes vapours at Fachoda, on 25th august. Suspect it! "Lord Khartoum ", the sirdar gathers then a warlike device which became important, and sets off the 11th for Fachoda with 2.000 men. He arrives the 19th adding by letter "any whites" who occupy Fachoda, are to let the flag of the [khidiye] float again at the top of the [mondineh]. Marchand refuses saying that he would make kill up to the last one of his men before letting in Anglo-Egyptians to the French post, that he is here in order of the French government, etc. Then Kitchener establishes a camp at 1km north of ours, with 6 guns held up at our citadel. Then he goes to establish a camp similar at the entry of Sobat, on the hillock of the left bank, at 500m of the Nile. He envies the Abon Klea in Ghazal, the sultan in Bahr-el-Ghazal, and returns, with his battalion of highlanders, towards Khartoum, and maybe towards Cairo where he is going to rest on his laurels with his inseparable Wingate. There are two big battles, at first that of [Atbana], then that of Omderman. The English people exult; it adorned that without our presence at Fachoda their gunboats went back up the Nile with English flags, and not Egyptian. At Fachoda, we bombard English of baskets of vegetables of the garden of Landeroin, and we receive in reply cases of Wingate, from which you receive a copy. Relation not too bad. By October 8th arrives an English gunboat with this telegram: " Marchand was named commander (major) on October 1st. Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr Delcassé, asks for the sending to Cairo of a French officer to have information on what was made on the Nile for the mission ". Germain being on the right bank of the Nile, with Fouque, searching for these untraceable Abyssinians, it is Baratier who straightaway leaves carrying to Cairo Marchand´s reports. A few days after Marchand notices that he forgot to send the treaty signed by Mek, and the other important pieces, he plots to go himself to Cairo, and when I arrive on 19th oct. he tells me to stay at his disposal in case the English people would refuse him the passage on their twice-weekly mail between Fachoda and Khartoum. Thus the Faidherbe stays in Fachoda and cannot come to get you for now. Terrifying news arriving from France: after the elections we have a radical cabinet, president Brisson, Lockroy to the navy, Bourgeois in the public works, Fouillat in colonies, Delcassé in the Foreign Affairs, Cavaignac has the war, etc. But Cavaignac resigned at the end of September, after the suicide of Lieutenant-colonel Henry, and was replaced by […] [zurlinden]. […] all this because of a false [assistant] also resigned, we do not know why, for Lieutenant-colonel Henry. This famous secret room of the Dreyfus, Esterhazy, Zola trials was only a […]. (Conveniently, Zola ran away to Belgium). The ministry is a supporter to revise the Dreyfus trial; this one doubtless returned to France. This affair is absolutely insane, and leads to a colossal upheaval. War council judges were they misled by […]? It is said that Esterhazy is the author of the slip etc. Anyway general chaos, shames on shames in France … In the first days of October we say that Paris had to be occupied militarily by 45.000 men under the orders of Zurlinden. On the other hand, mayhem in China; it adorned that a French-Russian body occupies Beijing. In the middle of this waste, Marchand did well to leave for Cairo, where he will support the French interests on the Nile, and can cry out hard so that we send to us other men, if the government does not want to evacuate. He left on 25th oct. for Khartoum, (by English boat) where from the railroad succeeds now. As a matter of fact the mission made all that she was able to, and, whatever happens, we have nothing to be blamed of. The fight of 25 august is enormous luck, which prevented Kitchener from taking towards us a too cutting attitude. We think of returning by French Abyssinia! At Fachoda we are now 12 days away from Cairo, [at revolution]. On my part I promise you to make all the possible so that we do not leave you out of order in Mecha. I plan to return soon with 40 men, and to make cross the sedd to the Faidherbe. I come down again in deplorable conditions; bled of 6 men and of a whaler since October 13th, I re-bleed of 8 men and the other whaler, which leaves me with the mechanics and the drivers only. But there is big national interest, in the fact that Mecha is occupied at the moment by French troops. At your place, to be more on to be found, by Oubangui otherwise by Fouque, this is what I would write to [Cureau]: "I ask you for [Instanmently] for reasons of health, and to join the Mission Congo-Nil which can receive the order to leave Fachoda for Abyssinia from one week to the next; to be replaced in Mecha by a non-commissioned officer, with 6 to 10 infantrymen. It is all that it is necessary to guard the French flag there, and tell the Anglo-Egyptians of our occupation of Denkas territories. The country is rich, the natives are quiet and very favourable to our establishment in this point; with red pearls and some [mellanda] of iron we get fresh supplies infinitely …" Fort Desain can perfectly remove a non-commissioned officer with 6 to 10 infantrymen and send them to Mecha! Then I recommend you to begin to come down here in whaler. I ask you [instanmently], on my part, to send back to me immediately, with [ Tahi Duap], the indispensable man of the Faidherbe, […] the men of bane in the absence of whom I worry personally and my [yakoma] wood cutters. They have the current with them to come down, and are not in danger (with 1 month of ration at first). Goodbye, Good luck, and see you soon I hope, your devoted, Signed: A H Dye. You´re on the board, if not already promoted captain". (Alfred Dreyfus was suspected of revealing secrets of the French army to the Germans and this affair was worsened by the fact that he was Jewish. The Dreyfus affair is very important because it divided France into two clans the Dreyfusards and the antiDreyfusards. Esterhazywas in fact the man guilty of this treason. Zola is a French novelist of the time who decided to defend Dreyfus by publishing the book "J´accuse"). Another letter, from Marchand, dated 1898 (10 Nov.):"My dear Largeau, 60 carriers intended for the provisioning of the post of Rapids were yesterday morning sent by fort Honniger. They´re taking 52 loads of flour (approximately 1000kg) and 7 boxes pearls, plus a load bottles wine and skins. The wine is intended for the staff of the post arsenal, skins in the mountains of the [etienne], 7 boxes pearls will be deposited at a store of the post arsenal. So you have 52 carriers loaded with supplies and 8 carriers you will load with supplies from the arsenal poste reserve. The 60 carriers must go to the Rapids with you. Besides I made by sultan [Camboura] the order to gather 40 carriers of villages around the post arsenal, who will be loaded with supplies of the reserve and will join the 60 others. Total 100 carriers of supplies whom you will lead to Rapids. Your personal luggage in addition. [Kuni] understood prescriptions forming desiderata. You will arrange, according to the number of carriers whom you will have and the quantity of supplies that the reserve of the post arsenal can supply. The important would be to be able to lead 100 loads of supplies to the Rapids, because these foods are intended for the occupation of Koutchouk ali. I remind you the prescription concerning Dorouma who will have his carbine if he can supply within 48 hours of your passage in his domain 5 - 600 [satenis] to the Rapids. So approximately 2500 [satenis] gathered in the Rapids with which will be made the occupation of Koutchouk ali. You will follow as I told you, with your 100 carriers and your 29 infantrymen plus the [basniguus] which accompany them, on route [ Kuvyalé] - Kama - Go - Dorouma-Hibbé - Rapids. You will make the topographic report. You will find instructions by arriving at Rapids where you will stay probably only just the time to wait for the supplies from the chief Dorouma. You should just put yourselves by arriving at the disposal of Lieutenant Mangin. I authorize by the same mail staff sergeant of the post arsenal to deliver to you for each of your 29 infantrymen a small piece of materials of colours taken in the more or less damaged bundles of batiste. This piece intended to make a small mosquito net has every man. I shall send orders in time so that the same distribution is made for the infantrymen of the detachment Mangin. The men need to have thread and the needles to sew their mosquito net. I count that you can leave the post arsenal with your convoy in the evening of the 11th to go sleep in Kama, or at the latest the 12th. The sooner the better. Warn the chief Kama who will make warn Go and Dorouma. Each owes you a day of prepared food. This food will be paid to the chief Kama by a voucher of you that he will touch at the post arsenal, to the chief Dorouma by a voucher of you whom he will touch at the post of Rapids. For Go or the intermediate villages (cultures) you will pay directly. I believe that you have pearls. If you do not have any left make a voucher for [Chuikinh] when you leave. You are authorized to say on my behalf to Kama that if I am satisfied by his processes, I shall myself give him a carbine and cartridges as I already have for some of his brothers. Attached is a small schedule with information for the road [Kuvyalé] - Rapids. I wish you, with expensive friendships, good health, safe journey, good success. You will find later orders relative to the exploration of the pond [Wava]. J: Marchand. P.S.: I attached no importance to the word "fortune" that you used on your letter of the 5th. You think me one thousand times more susceptible than I am in reality. The truth is that the monstrous accusation of one of my companions with regard to my actions and to their true motives surprised me in full peace of mind and seriously affected me. I was hundred thousand leagues to plan that the same supposition could be never made on me, and in spite of me my character was a little modified. I feel it . Now I am afraid and consider often obliged to assert the absolute purity of my motives. I recognize that it is stupid but frankly what would you do in my place? I am a little disorientated. It will glide. I am used to taking all the responsibilities."Subject to 20% VAT on Buyer’s Premium. For more information please view Terms and Conditions for Buyers.

Lot 4021

MAURITIUSEarly Letters and Handstamps1848 (15 Mar.) circular addressed to Duncan & Lurgnie, wine merchants in Bordeaux, in the handwriting as on the Post Office Mauritius Bordeaux cover, showing red Le Havre entry d.s. and, on reverse, "mauritius/post office" double-ring d.s. (Type PS6); also 1840 (29 Apr.) entire letter addressed to Lurgnie & Co., Bordeaux, showing red Pauillac entry d.s. with arrival c.d.s. on reverse Subject to 20% VAT on Buyer’s Premium. For more information please view Terms and Conditions for Buyers.

Lot 38

A suite of Paul Costelloe black tinted and clear cut glass, including a decanter and four white wine glasses (boxed).

Lot 216

A pair of hallmarked silver wine coasters, together with various items of plate, including coffee pot, sauce boat, bottle coaster and a cased set of six cake forks, various dates and makers.

Lot 217

An interesting mixed lot of silver plate, including wine funnel, asparagus servers, cheese scoop, wine taster, egg cruet, crumb scoop with antler handle and other items, various dates and makers.

Lot 341

Six wooden and steel wine racks, each with provision for 36 bottles.

Lot 345

A wrought iron wine cage, green painted with provision for 39 bottles.

Lot 1232

"A coated iron wine rack, to hold 100 bottles approximately, with lockable doors, 104 x 102 x 37.5cm"

Lot 289

TWO 18TH C WINE GLASSES WITH SOLID STEM AND FOLDED FOOT

Lot 111

MISCELLANEOUS PLATED WARE TO INCLUDE A VICTORIAN MELON SHAPE TEAPOT, WINE COASTERS, TRAYS AND DISHES ETC

Lot 150

A PAIR OF SWEDISH SILVER ONE HANDLED WINE CUPS WITH HEMISPHERICAL HAMMER TEXTURED BOWL, CONTROL MARKS, 2 OZS AND A CULTURED PEARL AND SILVER LEAF BROOCH

Lot 221

A SET OF SIX VICTORIAN CUT GLASS WINE GLASSES, WITH FACETED BUCKET BOWL AND KNOPPED STEM

Lot 120

A collection of five boxed Waterford Crystal sets of six glasses, comprising hock, claret, brandy, whisky, and wine glasses

Lot 126

A collection of cut and moulded glassware to include decanter, free blown Art Glass wine glasses etc

Lot 225

Two wine coolers, one silver plate and the other marked `Moet` together with two silver plated coasters.

Lot 487

Wine: a case of 12 bottles of Chateau Cissac, 1994, in original wooden case.

Lot 511

OBAN 14 YEAR OLD Single Highland malt Scotch whisky. 75cl, 43% volume. TALISKER 10 YEAR OLD Single Highland malt Scotch whisky. 75cl, 45.8% volume. BRUICHLADDICH 10 YEAR OLD Single Islay malt Scotch whisky. Distilled and bottled by Bruichladdich Distillery Co. Ltd. Sole UK distributer Wine & Spirit International Ltd. 75cl, 40% volume. In tall bottle. 3 bottles Talisker has fill at top of shoulder

Lot 549

BERISFORD SOLERA 1914 Rare Amoroso Cream Sherry, bottle NO.88151. Shipped by Capital Wine & Travers, Harwich. 0.70 Lts., no strength stated. Good.

Lot 573

AUCHENTOSHAN 1999 BORDEAUX CASK Single Lowland malt Scotch whisky. Distilled 1999, aged 11 years. Mature in a Bordeaux wine cask. 700ml, 58% volume. In carton. AUCHENTOSHAN FESTIVAL 2009 A distillery exclusive limited edition single Lowland malt Scotch whisky. Bottled 2009. 700ml, 56.5% volume. In black velvet sack. AUCHENTOSHAN 12 YEAR OLD Single Lowland malt Scotch whisky. 700ml, 43% volume. In purple tube. AUCHENTOSHAN 12 YEAR OLD Single Lowland malt Scotch whisky. 700ml, 43% volume. In carton. AUCHENTOSHAN THREE WOOD Single Lowland malt Scotch whisky. 700ml, 43% volume. In carton. 5 bottles Auchentoshan 12 year old carton is worn.

Lot 627

BOWMORE 9 YEAR OLD FEIS ILE 2009 Single Islay Malt Whisky. Limited release, distilled: 14/06/1999, warehouse: no.6, cask type: sherry/bourbon/wine, Bottle no: 120/900. 700ml, 57.1% volume. In velvet pouch. LAGAVULIN FEIS ISLE 2009 Natural cask strength single Islay Malt Whisky. Bottled especially to celebrate Feis Ile 2009. Bottled: 2009, Distilled: 1995, limited edition bottle no: 576, cask no: 4556. 70cl, 54.4% volume. CAOL ILA FEIS ILE 2009 Natural cask strength single Islay Malt Whisky. Date filled: 18/12/1996, Bottled: 2009. Bottle no: 626, cask no: 19313. 70cl, 58% volume. 3 bottles No damage

Lot 683

GLENROTHES 1987 Single Speyside malt whisky, bottled 1999. 700ml, 43% volume. TALISKER 10 YEAR OLD Single Island malt whisky. 70cl, 45.8% volume. THE CORSLEYBURN Single Lowland malt whisky, aged 10 years, produced for The Moffat Wine Shop. 70cl, 40% volume. BENROMACH GLENLIVET 12 YEAR OLD Single Speyside malt whisky. 70cl, 40% volume. 4 bottles Very good.

Lot 698

ROGHAINN NAM FEAR-EOLAIS 1963 Single grain whisky. Distilled 1963. Bottled by Victoria Wine Co., London. 70cl, 40% volume. In wooden box. HIGHLAND MOUNTAIN 21 YEAR OLD Blended Scotch whisky by MOrrison Bowmore for the Asian Market. 700ml, 43% volume. 2 bottles

Lot 739

MACALLAN 1841 REPLICA `A replica of the bottle, nose and flavour of an original bottling for Priest and Davidson, joint owners of The Macallan Distillery from 1847 - 1851. 700ml, 41.7% volume, in presentation box. MACALLAN 1861 REPLICA Single Speyside malt Scotch whisky. Replica of the bottle, nose and flavour of an original bottling by John McWilliam, wine merchant Craigellachie. 700ml, 42.7% volume. In presentation box. 2 bottles Good condition.

Lot 906

DA MHILE 1992 Single Campbeltown malt whisky from Springbank, distilled June 1992, bottled September 1999. Bottle no.606 of 1000. U.S. import by Barrique Wine Company, Chicago. 750ml, 46% volume, in carton. UCF.

Lot 163

Lady Rose Henriques, oil on board entitled `Wine Cellars in Corsica` dated 1956 framed

Lot 346

A set of six boxed Cristal de Lorraine cut crystal wine glasses with swag decoration on hexagonal shaped stems

Lot 347

A set of six boxed Cristal de Lorraine cut crystal wine glasses with swag decoration on hexagonal shaped stems

Lot 349

A set of six boxed Cristal de Lorraine cut crystal wine glasses with swag decoration on hexagonal shaped stems

Lot 355

A set of six Royal Brierley white wine or water glasses with hobnail design

Lot 356

A set of eight Royal Brierley red wine glasses with fern and faceted decoration

Lot 357

An assortment of Royal Brierley drinking glasses to include white wine, water, red wine, sherry glasses etc

Lot 409

Two mahogany and silver mounted wine coasters, one boxed

Lot 423

Edward Ardizzone, CBE, RA (1900-1979) large pen and ink drawing "The Wine Auction". Label verso "Presented to E Delmege, winner of The Toby Competition 1958" run by "Punch" magazine. The object of the competition was to invent a new role for popular sports. Photocopy of the rules in " Punch" also included, 15 x 40 cm.

Lot 1535

Inlaid brass-handled tray of waisted form and a mahogany wine table

Lot 509

An Adrian Sankey glass vase and a wine glass with twist stem

Lot 70

A Rare Chinese Porcelain Wine Cup Decorated with iron red Imperial dragons. Guangxu (1875 to 1908) mark & period. Provenance: Ex Allen Collection, illustrated in Allen`s Authentication of Later Chinese Porcelain Fig 62.1

Lot 134

Three Green & Yellow Decorated Wine Cups With four iron red roundels each marked with four character apocryphal Guangxu reign marks. Dia. 7.2cm. Together with a bright imperial yellow tea bowl bearing incised apocryphal Guangxu reign mark. Minor firing spots. Dia. 7.2cm.

Lot 282

Small Late Ming (?) Blanc De Chine Wine Cup H. 4cm. Dia. 7cm.

Lot 120

SIX SILVER MOUNTED SPODE COFFEE CANS AND SAUCERS the silver mounts with pierced decoration and scrolling handles, maker Charles S Green & Co Ltd, Birmingham 1933, the Spode coffee cans and saucers decorated with gilt highlighting on a wine coloured ground, pat. no. Y3135, printed mark, the cans 6cm high, the saucers 11.5cm diameter, with its original fitted case The coffee cans are slightly scratched where the silver mounts have been taken on and off. The silver is slightly misshapen on the base of some of the coffee cans.

Lot 323

A small collection of `Bristol` blue glass including three wine glasses and a decanter

Lot 38

WILLIAM IV SILVER WINE SLIDE maker`s mark for Solomon Houghan, London 1832, 15cm diameter; together with a tea caddy embossed with cherubs, 9cm high, a circular pedestal bon bon dish, 9cm high, a circular bon bon dish, 9cm diameter, a pair of bun salts, a napkin ring, a Christening mug and a baby spoon and pusher, approximately 577g in total (10) The Christening mug is badly dented. Bon bon dish also dented. Hallmarks to bun salts rubbed.

Lot 41

SILVER COLLARED WINE COASTER WITH SEVEN MATCHING SILVER COLLARED COASTERS each with a beaded rim and mounted on a glass coaster of star cut design, marked `Frank M. Whiting & Co. Sterling, Pat. Pending`, the wine coaster numbered 06 and the coasters numbered 04, the wine coaster 17.5cm diameter, each coaster 10cm diameter With minor surface wear to all of the coasters. The wine coaster with some minor knocks to the silver. The coasters with very minor dents to the silver. The glass intact, although the glass of the wine coaster with some minor flaws. Marks clear.

Lot 63

PAIR OF SILVER WINE LABELS of embossed rectangular form, with shell and scrolling acanthus borders, labelled `Brandy` and `Whisky`, maker `WW`, Birmingham 1962, engraved for Johnny Walker for winning Voyager Hotels Wine Waiter of the Year competition, 5.5cm long, together with two cut glass square decanters, 24cm high, and a photograph signed with Richard Branson`s autograph. Good condition

Lot 424

A silver plated wine cooler together with three other plated items.

Lot 36

A George III provincial silver wine funnel, maker Christian Ker Reid, late 18th/early 19th Century, Newcastle marks:, no apparent date letter, reeded upper rim and shaped tang, 14.5cm high, 5.25ozs.

Lot 49

A pair of 19th Century silver plated wine coasters: with gadrooned rims and wooden bases, crested, also an Old Sheffield plated drum mustard pot, a plated muffin dish with cover and sundry plated flatware.

Lot 99

An Old Sheffield plated wine coaster, circa 1800:, the sides finely pierced, with wooden base, also a pair of plated wine coasters with fluted foliate scroll borders, and three other coasters (6).

Lot 108

A pair of plated wine coasters:, with foliate scroll rims and wooden bases, 18cm diameter.

Lot 110

A collection of plated ware: to include an oval breakfast dish with turn-over cover, a set of six wine goblets, butter dish with turn-over cover, inkstand base, coaster, etc., together with a silver mounted dressing table ring box of capstan form, Chester, 1920 and a silver mounted cut glass dressing table jar, Birmingham, 1919.

Lot 112

Four commemorative sterling silver plates, maker John Pinches:, The Churchill Centenary Trust Plate, issued 1974, The Peter Scott Christmas Plate 1974, The Peter Scott Plate 1975 and Skating on the Brandy Wine 1975, all 20cm diameter and boxed, also three cased sterling silver `Christmas` spoons, maker John Pinches, each 13.5cm long.

Lot 118

A matched plated part Kings pattern flatware service, mainly by Mappin & Webb:, comprising 4 serving spoons, 8 table forks, 8 dessert forks, 8 dessert spoons, 6 soup spoons, 17 teaspoons, 8 table knives, 8 dessert knives and 8 side or tea knives, other plated ware includes a pair of wine goblets, sugar scuttle, butter dish, salad servers and miscellaneous cutlery.

Lot 148

A pair of modern silver wine goblets, maker C & C Ltd., London, 1975:, height 14.5cm, 13.25ozs.

Lot 294

WINE RACK, for twenty-four bottles, in the form of a telephone box, 40cm x 40cm x 121cm H.

Lot 344

WINE COOLER, for four bottles, silver plated, 29cm W.

Lot 345

WINE COOLER, for two bottles, silver plated, 31cm L.

Lot 549

Large 241 bottle commercial wine rack, 108cm x 222cm

Lot 271

Two wicker baskets, a coal bucket, a wine rack, a table lamp and an advertising box

Lot 290

An oak occasional table and a wine table

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