A limed oak Elizabethan revival refectory type dining table ...

by Halls Fine Art Auctioneers
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Estimate

£800 - £1,200

Fees

A limed oak Elizabethan revival refectory type dining table From the Weight suite The plain top raised on twin carved cup-and-cover supports on sledge feet with further turned supports between, united by a square section stretcher. 273cm long x 117cm wide x 79cm high
Provenance:
The collection of Charles George Weight, thence by descent to the vendor

Acquired from Maple & Co. Ltd., Bournemouth, October 1946

Footnote:
Charles George Weight (1914-2010) was the son of Charles A. Weight who took over the Briton motor company at its new site at Chillington Fields, Wolverhampton, producing motor vehicles until 1929. As a young man starting out in life, Charles Jnr., found employment with the wireless radio company A.J.S. before joining his father's firm which, by then, primarily sold motor spares and tools to engineering companies.

Charles persuaded his father to purchase the entire stock of Tractor Traders Ltd., which he sold out of spare buildings at the Chillington site, a venture which grew well, helped along by the Ministry of Defence's preparations in the run up to the second World War. What would become a multinational enterprise, with Tractor Spares Ltd. at its core, specialising in tracked vehicles with customers throughout the globe, earned Charles and his family a significant fortune but one that demanded diligent hard work as well as the ability to spot an opportunity when it arose.

In 1946 while visiting Bournemouth in Devon, Charles happened to see a beautiful dining suite with matching settee in the premises of Maple & Co. on St Peter's Road. On hearing the price of the suite of £1500 (the equivalent of over £50,000 today) he offered £1000 which was haughtily declined. Evidently, however, the Maple staff reconsidered and accepted Charles' offer, excluding the settee, and the suite was delivered to his home, Enderby, near Wolverhampton. According to Charles's memoirs, the settee from the suite found its way to the Brazen Head Pub in Dublin and was seen there in the early 1990s but its subsequent whereabouts are now unknown.

The suite was believed to have had connections with Scandinavian royalty, perhaps on the enthusiastic suggestion of Maple & Co., which led its erstwhile owner to research the history of furniture making in this region. However, the construction of the sideboard, table and chairs would indicate that while the carving bears similarities in that it is all of broadly Renaissance revival in form and motif, it is likely that the sideboard, chairs and table were separately made but latterly brought together and given a 'limed' surface treatment to unify it as a suite, perhaps in the early 20th century, which will undoubtedly have contributed to thoughts of Scandinavia.

More Information

Generally fair to good condition with some signs of age and use.  Some surface wear in places where expected: top edges and corners; feet ends; stretcher.  Small chip to one corner of the top.  Two pieces of moulding from the base capitols adrift but present.  Small loss to one of the base capitols.

Closed
Auction Date:
9th Oct 24 at 10am BST

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Sale Dates:
Wed 9th Oct 2024 10am BST (Lots 1 to 229)