Apter-Fredericks

Important 18th & 19th Century Antique Furniture



Mahogany

A Fine George III Mahogany Carlton House Writing Table
A Rare George II Mahogany Side Table
A George III Hepplewhite Period Mahogany Cabinet of Exceptional Colour and Patination
A Regency Mahogany Games Table Attributable to Gillows of Lancaster
A George III Carved Mahogany Settee
A Pair of Chippendale Period Mahogany Concertina Action Card Tables
A Pair of George III Large Bergere Chairs
A George III Mahogany Commode of Unusual Form
A Regency Period Mahogany & Ebony Writing Table
An Early Regency Oval Mahogany Occasional Table
A George III Carved Mahogany Side-table
An Exceptional Carved Mahogany Side Table by William Vile
A Pair of Regency Period Mahogany Curricle Bergeres
A Rare George II Carved Mahogany Armchair
A Matched Pair of George III Mahogany Commodes Attributed to Henry Hill of Marlborough
A George III Chippendale Period Carved Mahogany Serpentine Fronted Side Table
A George III Mahogany Silver Table
A 19th Century Mahogany Presentation Wheelbarrow and Spade with Silver Plated Mounts by Elkington & Co.
A George III Window Seat
A Pair of George III Mahogany Armchairs Attributed to Gillow of Lancaster
A Rare Pair of George III Mahogany Plate Buckets
A Nineteenth Century Mahogany Tobacco Jar
An Unusual Regency Period Mahogany Cellaret
An Important George III Mahogany Library Table of Superb Colour & Quality
A George II Walnut Serpentine Front Commode
A George III Carved Mahogany 'Chinese' Chippendale Silver Table
A Most Exceptional George III Mahogany Serpentine Fronted Chest on Chest
A George III Satinwood Bonhuer du Jour in the Manner of George Simson
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 Most Unusual George III Carved Mahogany Whatnot
A Pair of George III Breakfront Cabinets
A Pair of George III Adam Period Carved Mahogany Armchairs
A Pair of George III Adam Period Rosewood Semi-Elliptical Console Tables
A Regency Period Mahogany Extending Dining Table
The Hinton House Commodes Attributed to Ince & Mayhew
A Fine Pair of George III Hepplewhite Period Mahogany Armchairs Attributed to John Cobb
A Set of Eighteen George III Mahogany Dining-Chairs
A George III Carved Mahogany Side Table
A George III Mahogany Oval Wine Cooler
A Rare George III Carved Mahogany Armchair
A George III Carved Mahogany Bookcase
A George III Carved Mahogany Stool
A Rare Mahogany Miniature Dumbwaiter
A Rare George III Carved Mahogany Armchair
A George III Chippendale Period Carved Mahogany Commode
Saved For The Nation
A Rare George III Mahogany Urn Stand
A George III Carved Mahogany Urn Stand
A Rare George III Mahogany and Brass Champagne Cooler
A George II Period Carved Mahogany Bureau Cabinet Attributed to Giles Grendey
A Fine George III Adam Period Mahogany Side Table
A George II Period Pedestal
A George III Mahogany and Cross-banded Barometer
A George III Mahogany Card Table in the Manner of Ince & Mayhew
An Expanding Circular Dining Table by Robert Jupe
A George II Carved Mahogany Side-table Attributed to Giles Grendey
A Regency Period Hall Seat Attributed to George Bullock
An Important Regency Mahogany Sideboard With a Pair of Pedestals en Suite. Attributed to George Oakley
A Pair of George III Adam Period Carved Mahogany Sidechairs
An Elegant Georgian Mahogany Circular Dining Table
An Unusual George III Carved Mahogany Tripod Table
The Hinton House Commodes

The Hinton House Commodes Attributed to Ince & Mayhew

Height: 34" 88.5cm
Width: 37" 94.5cm
Depth: 20" 52cm

Each crossbanded in rosewood, the rectangular top above three graduated cedar and mahogany-lined drawers with convex quarter-fillets, above a waved apron and gently splayed feet. The handles original. One chest with paper label pasted to the top drawer inscribed in an 18th century hand 'Chinese Dressing Room', followed by an inventory of the contents of that room, the other chest with similar paper label pasted to the top drawer inscribed 'Chinese Bed Room', followed by an inventory of the contents of that room.

English, Circa 1790

Supplied to John, 4th Earl Poulett (1756-1819), Hinton House, Hinton St George, Somerset.
These golden sycamore chests, with elegantly bowed aprons and Grecian-scrolled feet, are conceived in 1780s Roman fashion, as featured in a clothes-press pattern in Messrs. A. Hepplewhite & Co.'s Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer's Guide, 1788. They are likely to have been commissioned for Hinton House, Hinton St. George, Somerset around the time of its aggrandisement circa 1790 by John 4th Earl Poulett (d. 1819), following his inheritance in 1788. The 4th Earl was a close friend of George, Prince of Wales, later George IV. The chests are pasted with inventory lists of accompanying equipment, which indicate that they furnished the window piers of the bedroom and dressing-room of an apartment hung with Chinese flowered paper (C. Winn, The Pouletts of Hinton St. George, London, 1976, p. 149). Commodes intended for bedroom apartments such as this pair, were often supplied in a series, with one placed in each of the apartment's rooms. The paper inventory pasted to the top drawer of each commode would appear to confirm this: one commode placed in the Dressing Room and one placed in the Bedroom.

ATTRIBUTION
This pair of commodes are identical to another pair from the furniture believed to have been supplied by Ince and Mayhew between 1787 and 1792 for Daylesford, Warren Hastings' House in Worcestershire.

The Hastings accounts, which despite recording the day to day expenditure on the building and furnishing of Daylesford, do not include any of the bills for the furniture. It has been assumed that they must have been collected together at some point and subsequently lost; which does have precedents. However, there is a receipt dated 1790 for £236.19.7 from his architect for plate glass supplied by Ince & Mayhew.

Despite the lack of bills, Hasting's bank records are extremely useful and include five entries between 11th July 1787 and 1st January 1789 referring to payments of £1,686 to Mr Mayhew, with a further payment in June 1792 to Mayhew & Co, making £2,176 in total.

Equally significant is the fact that no other cabinet makers are recorded in the accounts and without the furniture there would be no other way of accounting for the payments to Mayhew.

The pair of commodes at Daylesford and this pair are identical. The measurements are within a half inch of each other and they both have the added expense of including cedar drawer linings.

HINTON HOUSE
There has been a Hinton House on the same site since 1490 but very little of the original building remains. With the family's newly elevated status in 1627, the 1st Baron Poulett (d. 1649) improved and enlarged the house accordingly. A new south wing, built following the design principles of Inigo Jones, was completed by 1636. Just a few years later in 1650 the estate ledgers show extensive building work was carried out, resulting in two further wings. In the early 18th Century, John, 1st Earl Poulett (1663-1743) remodelled the Long Gallery. However, it was in 1789 that the most drastic alterations of Hinton occurred, under John, 4th Earl Poulett (1756-1819). However, just a year after completion, in 1794, the Earl, still not satisfied, engaged Sir John Soane to remodel the interior. In spite of making plans and several visits to the house, the Earl decided at the last moment that he preferred the newly fashionable Gothic style and employed the architect James Wyatt (1746-1813) instead to proceed with the modifications. It was under Wyatt's direction that the panelled Grand Saloon, vaulted Gothic Gallery, and the two towers that flank the west of the house were added. The Library was redesigned, with bookshelves 'lined with crimson moreen' and ceiling mouldings in the latest fashion (C. Winn, op. cit., p. 143).