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Two George III silver wine labels, by Peter and Ann Bateman, London 1796 & 1798, each with bright cut edge, engraved `Port` and `Claret` respectively, 4cm wide; another by George Unite, Birmingham 1847, engraved `Sherry`; together with three Old Sheffield plate labels of reeded oval shape engraved `Moselle` x 2, `Sauternes` (6)
An early 19th century mahogany wine cooler in the manner of Thomas Hope, circa 1810 in the form of a Roman bath, on scroll carved block feet and part sunk castors 46 x 76 x 51cm (17.94 x 29.64 x 19.89in) The Roman influence is almost certainly drawn from the antiquities Charles Heathcote Tatham was aquiring on behalf of the court architect Henry Holland for his embellishment of Carlton House for the Prince of Wales, later George IV and so favoured by Thomas Hope, who commissioned a pair of wine coolers in a similar form for his Duchess Street mansion museum in 1800
[Bristol interest] A Victorian silver church wine flagon by Martin, Hall & Co., London 1863, with a foliate knop finial to the domed cover, an S-scroll handle terminating in a shield, the straight-tapered body engraved with a Cross Fleuree and ‘This Do In Remembrance Of Me’ within a wreath, on a moulded foot, engraved beneath ‘Presented by the Ladies of the Lewins Mead Congregation in the 22nd Year of the Ministry of the Revd. William James and the 7th Year of the Revd. R. C. Jones. December 1863’, 35.5cm (14in) high, 1400g (45 oz) Lewin’s Mead Unitarian Chapel is one of the oldest surviving non-comformist chapels in the country. Lewin’s Mead Meeting was established as a Presbyterian society in the early 1690s, with Mr. John Weekes as the first minister. Early meetings were held in the room of a private house, but by 1706, the date of the earliest deed of the Lewin’s Mead premises, a meeting house and Young Men’s meeting room were in existence. The Old Meeting House was demolished in 1787 and the present building erected the following year.
Three George III silver crescent shaped wine labels by Hester Bateman, two with maker’s and standard marks, one with two maker’s marks only, circa 1770, with gadrooned borders, engraved ‘MADERIA’, ‘PORT’ and ‘SHERRY’, with suspension chains, 4.5cm (1.75in) wide, 28g (0.9 oz) gross
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