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On
April 20th, 2002 Ted Wiederseim
conducted a catalogued sale at the
Montgomery School in Chester Springs,
Pennsylvania, which was brimming with
oriental carpets, furniture, fine paintings,
silver, and period accessories. Illustrated
in color on the front cover of the catalogue
was the historically important Paul Storr
seal box and document. The circular seal
box, engraved with the Royal seal of King
George III, was made by one of London’s most
famous silversmiths, Paul Storr and attached
to it was a Royal document on parchment
empowering one Phinius Bond with “Full
Power” to negotiate parts of the John Jay
Treaty with President George Washington.
Phinius Bond was a Loyalist born in Calvert
County Maryland, lived most of his life in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and was buried in
London, England. The Seal box descended down
through the family to the consignor. With
five phone bidders and lots of interest in
the room it soared to a lofty $35,200 and
was knocked down to one of the phone bidders
who said it was going to an East Coast
private collector. Other pieces of silver
also did very well with a large silver ewer
by Dominick & Haff realizing $2090, a mint
julep cup brought a surprising $880 and an
egg shaped condiment container with vermeil
interior did $632.50 Furniture was offered
throughout the day with the best being a
Baltimore Hepplewhite mahogany two-part
secretary bookcase, circa 1790. Its rare
features included line inlays and églomisé
tablets in the cornice. Again with several
phone bidders and competitive bidding in the
room it went for a strong $48,400. It came
from the same family as the silver seal box.
Other pieces for furniture did well with a
German walnut inlaid dower chest with inlaid
tulips and birds in square panels bringing
$4070. A nice Sheraton style mahogany
sideboard sold for $2,475 and a Pennsylvania
walnut dish-top tea table for a reasonable
$1,375. Also from Pennsylvania, a
Northampton County walnut tall case clock
with a badly flaking enameled face and
thirty-hour movement sold within estimate at
$3,190. Several pieces of mission oak were
in the sale, a strong showing by a set of
six mission oak chairs signed “Limberts”
with replaced seats selling for a $2035. A
walnut spice box with a wonderful multi-drawered
interior, tombstone paneled door and despite
the replaced door and feet still managed a
hefty $5,500. A line inlaid Hepplewhite
walnut chest-on-chest with flaring French
feet did $7,000 and a cherry two-part corner
cupboard went out at a reasonable $4,000.00.
Perhaps the strongest performance in the
sale was the paintings and prints. The
biggest surprise was an impressionist oil on
panel snow scene with stone bridge by
Schofield. It was literally picked out of
the trash and consigned late. It opened at
$500 and quickly rose to $34,100. It
certainly proves you can turn trash into
cash! An English over-mantel landscape
painting titled “View in Surry Near Gatton
Park Showing Reigate, Nutfield, Bletchingley”
painted by D. Wolstenholme, Jr. and in need
of restoration made $14,000 and an oil on
panel of a jockey and horse titled “Glencoe”
signed J. F. Herring raced to $9,900.
Sporting art was strong throughout the sale
with another English painting of two
terriers attacking a hare jumping to $2,200.
Several Sir Alfred Munnings signed artist
proofs were sold, all in very good
condition, the best being “Our Mutual Friend
the Horse” selling for $1870 and several
Richard Stone Reeves prints were also sold.
A diary of Dr. Richard Harlan’s 1815 trip to
India from Philadelphia sold for $4,950 and
the next lot was grouping of ephemera
including some Civil War letters, which flew
to $11,550. Two early Quaker marriage
certificates brought $577.50 and $770
respectively. A pair of brass andirons
signed Bailey realized $880, a wonderful
mahogany cased brass telescope by James W.
Queen, Philadelphia selling for a sharp
$1650 and a small tortoise shell casket with
brass paw feet and silver label bearing the
name of Mary M. Ricketts sold for $1,760. A
Tucker porcelain pitcher dated 1828 did $990
with a large selection of spatterware and
stoneware, some in as found condition,
bringing good prices such as a nine-gallon
water cooler going for a cool $770.
Wiederseim’s next catalogued sale is
scheduled for June. |