Apter-Fredericks

Important 18th & 19th Century Antique Furniture



Chairs

A Fine George I Walnut Wing Armchair together with a copy
A George III Carved Mahogany Settee
A Pair of George III Large Bergere Chairs
A Unusual Pair of Regency Hall Chairs
An Important Pair of George III Gilt-wood Settees in the Manner of Thomas Chippendale the Younger
A George II Walnut Armchair
A Pair of Regency Period Mahogany Curricle Bergeres
A Rare George II Carved Mahogany Armchair
A Pair of George III Giltwood Bergeres Atrributed to Francois Herve and Probably Supplied by Henry Holland.
A George III Window Seat
A Pair of George III Mahogany Armchairs Attributed to Gillow of Lancaster
A Regency Period Day-Bed
A Pair of Regency Day Beds
A Pair of George IV Mahogany Hall Chairs in the Manner of Sir Robert Smirke
A Pair of George II Carved Mahogany Gainsborough Armchairs
A Pair of George I Walnut Stools
A Pair of George III Adam Period Carved Mahogany Armchairs
A Fine Pair of George III Hepplewhite Period Mahogany Armchairs Attributed to John Cobb
A Set of Eighteen George III Mahogany Dining-Chairs
A Rare George III Carved Mahogany Armchair
A George III Carved Mahogany Stool
A George II Carved Walnut Armchair
A Rare George III Carved Mahogany Armchair
A Pair of Regency Period Curricle Chairs
A Pair of George III Adam Period Carved Mahogany Sidechairs
A Pair of George I Walnut Stools

A Pair of George I Walnut Stools

Height: 18" 46cm
Width: 21" 54.5cm
Depth: 17" 45cm

The rounded rectangular drop-in seats upholstered in Eighteenth century needlework above shaped aprons with cabriole legs carved with shell motifs to the knees before terminating in pad feet.

English, Circa 1725

Sir Howe Hicks, Witcombe Park, Gloucestershire
Thence by decent to the Hicks Beach family

The manor of Great Witcombe was acquired in the early 17th century by Lady Elizabeth Hicks, although her family was based in Essex. It was not until the late 17th century that one of her grandsons; Sir Michael Hicks decided to adopt Witcombe as his home and enlarge a small farm on the estate into accommodation suitable for a family of his means and status. Hence the existing buildings bearing the date 1607 were retained for the purposes of service accommodation and a five-bay, two story block was added prior to 1704. A bird's eye view painting by Adrian van Diest commissioned by Sir Michael to record the newly completed building and landscape is still owned by his descendants. Witcombe passed to a series of Sir Michael's direct male descendants starting with Sir Howe Hicks in 1710 and ending with Sir William Hicks who died in 1835. During this time scant building work was carried out and only then when essential repairs were required owing to structural problems. The house was inherited in 1825 by Sir William's daughter Lady Cromie who was tragically abandoned by her husband when he eloped with a maid on their honeymoon. Following Lady Cromie's death in 1885, the house passed to a far cousin, W.F. Hicks Beach who was forced to demolish the building due to its dilapidated condition.

REFERENCE
Nicholas Kingsley, The Country Houses of Gloucestershire, Volume Two 1630-1830, 1992, pp. 267-8.