VAT included (see terms) | Exclude VAT

[12 landscape prints most engraved by Benjamin Green after Paul Sandby, Thomas Daniell, S.H. Grimn, etc.]
[12 landscape prints most engraved by Benjamin Green after Paul Sandby, Thomas Daniell, S.H. Grimn, etc.]
[all but one] Pub.d Aug.st 1st 1787 by C. Phillips.
Album of 12 stipples and etchings, various sizes, largest 185 x 250mm (7¼ x 9¾"). Three plates with heavy oxidisation of paper.
A collection of plates reissued by Charles Phillips. Scarce collection stitched as purchased in the 18th century.
[Ref: 58838]   £650.00   view all images for this item
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

View of the Town of Alton Hampshire.
View of the Town of Alton Hampshire.
C.J. Greenwood, Del.t & lith. Printed by Standidge & Co, 36 Old Jewry, London.
Published by D. Walden, Bookseller, Alton. [n.d., c.1850.]
Scarce tinted lithograph, locally published. Printed area 280 x 350mm. Repaired tear in edge. Sky messy.
[Ref: 51235]   £230.00   (£276.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

The Friend of the People. Thomas Attwood, Esq.r.
The Friend of the People. Thomas Attwood, Esq.r. Proof.
W Green del.t. Head eng.d. by E Scriven. Accompaniments by James B Allen.
Printed & Published by Josiah Allen 5. Bennett's Hill Birm.m Aug 20.1832.
Rare steel engraving with stipple. Sheet 270 x 175mm (10¾ x 7").
Thomas Attwood (1783-1856), political reformer, founded the Birmingham Political Union in 1830 campaigning for cities and large towns to be directly represented in Parliament.
[Ref: 53189]   £140.00   (£168.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

The Evening Beauty.
The Evening Beauty.
Miss A. Green Pinx.t.
London Published 7th June 1781, for J. Harris, Sweetings Alley, Cornhill.
Stipple, scarce. Sheet 180 x 140mm (7 x 5½). Trimmed within plate, corners snipped. Bit dusty.
A well-dressed young woman, fan in hand, with four lines of verse from Rev. Dr Lisle's 'Charms of Beauty'.
[Ref: 45378]   £130.00   (£156.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

The Morning Beauty.
The Morning Beauty.
Miss A. Green Pinx.t.
London Pub;ished 7th June 1781, for J. Harris, Sweetings Alley, Cornhill.
Stipple, printed in brown, scarce. Sheet 180 x 140mm (7 x 5½). Trimmed within plate, corners snipped. Bit dusty.
A well-dressed young woman, hands in a fur muff, with four lines of verse from Rev. Dr Lisle's 'History of Porsenna'.
[Ref: 45377]   £130.00   (£156.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

High Street, Bognor, Sussex.
High Street, Bognor, Sussex.
C.J. Greenwood, Delt. et Lith. Printed by S. Straker, London.
Published by Richard Holmden, Bognor [n.d, c.1850].
Rare sepia-tinted lithograph heightened in white, image 245 x 350mm. 9¾ x 13¾". Repaired worm holes on top left.
Bognor Regis is a seaside resort town in West Sussex. The publisher of this print (as was common practice) has inserted his premises, a shop and 'Library' into this view of the High Street. Richard Holmden is listed in the Post Office Directory for 1851 as a bookseller, stationer, and owner of circulating library, as well as watchmaker and jeweller.
Not in Abbey Scenery.
[Ref: 26452]   £110.00   (£132.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Boot & Shoe Shop.
Boot & Shoe Shop.
J. Green del.t J.C. Stadler sculp.t
[Pub. 1813, at R. Ackermann, 101 Strand.]
Hand-coloured aquatint. 132 x 222mm (5¼ x 8¾").
Boot and shoe shop: Women customers try on shoes and boots at Leatherhead cobblers. From 'Poetical Sketches of Scarborough', illustrated by James Green.
[Ref: 52404]   £85.00   (£102.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Cartmel Priory.
Cartmel Priory. Founded A.D. 1188.
On Stone by Isaac Shaw from a Sketch by C.J. Greenwood. Printed by C. Hullmandel.
London Published by I. Shaw, 81, G.t Portland St. Portland Place. [n.d., c.1845.]
Sepia tinted lithograph, sheet 280 x 380mm (11 x 19"). A few stain spots.
Cartmel Priory, at Cartmel (originally Lancashire, now Cumbria), is a priory founded in 1190 by William Marshal, later 1st Earl of Pembroke for the Augustinian Canons and dedicated to Saint Mary the Virgin and Saint Michael. It was first colonised by a Prior and twelve monks from Bradenstoke Priory in Wiltshire.
[Ref: 12287]   £75.00   (£90.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Sir William D'Avenant K.t.
Sir William D'Avenant K.t.
Jo. Greenhill pinx. W. Faithorne Sculp. [c.1672.]
Engraving, sheet 250 x 165mm (9¾ x 6½"). Trimmed and glued to backing sheet.
A portrait of Sir William Davenant (1606-68), poet and playwright, showing his nose severely disfigured by syphilis. Made Poet Laureate by Charles I in 1638, he had to flee to France in 1641 after being found guilty of high treason by Parliament for his participation in the First Army Plot, a Royalist plan to occupy London. He returned to fight in the Civil War until the defeat at Naseby in 1645, after which he returned to France. In exile Charles II appointed him to the symbolic post of treasurer of the colony of Virginia in 1649; in 1650 he was made lieutenant governor of Maryland but was captured at sea by Parliament and sentenced to death. He was reprieved but spent 1651 in the Tower of London before being released. Davenant made much of a personal connection to Shakespeare. His parents owned the Crown Tavern in Oxford, where the Bard often stayed when travelling from London to Stratford-upon-Avon. In some accounts Shakespeare was Davenant's godfather; according to John Aubrey, Davenant even suggested Shakespeare was his real father. This portrait was the frontispiece to his 'Works of Sir William Davenant Kt, Consisting of those which were formerly Printed, and those which he design'd for the Press: Now Published out of the Authors Originall Copies'.
Fagan p.32.
[Ref: 42245]   £140.00   (£168.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Mr. Robert Drummond & Mr. Thomas Drummond, Sons of Robert Archbishop of York.
Mr. Robert Drummond & Mr. Thomas Drummond, Sons of Robert Archbishop of York.
B. West, pinxit, 1768. V. Green, fecit.
[n.d., c.1769.]
Mezzotint. Sheet 615 x 385mm (24¼ x 15¼"). Trimmed into plate, mounted on card at edges. Creases at bottom
Double portrait of Robert Hay Drummond, Archbishop of York (1711 - 1776), Archbishop of York from 1761, and Thomas Auriol Hay Drummond (1752 - 1773). They stand side by side in conversation in partial, neo-classical interior, Robert indicating a temple on hill in distance to left; globes, books and statue arranged around them. The print was exhibited at the Society of Arts in 1769. After Benjamin West (1738 - 1820).
Whitman: 5, II. Chaloner Smith: 41, ii of ii, published state.
[Ref: 46188]   £420.00  
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Mr. Robert Drummond & Mr. Thomas Drummond, Sons of Robert Archbishop of York.
Mr. Robert Drummond & Mr. Thomas Drummond, Sons of Robert Archbishop of York.
B. West, pinxit, 1768. V. Green, fecit.
[n.d., c.1769.]
Mezzotint. 615 x 385mm (24¼ x 15¼").
Double portrait of Robert Hay Drummond, Archbishop of York (1711 - 1776), Archbishop of York from 1761, and Thomas Auriol Hay Drummond (1752 - 1773). They stand side by side in conversation in partial, neo-classical interior, Robert indicating temple on hill in distance to left; globes, books and statue arranged around them. The print was exhibited at the Society of Arts in 1769. After Benjamin West (1738 - 1820). See 14364.
Whitman: 5, II. Chaloner Smith: 41, ii of ii, published state. Ex: Collection of The Hon. C. Lennox-Boyd.
[Ref: 14761]   £350.00  
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

[Mr. Robert Drummond & Mr. Thomas Drummond, Sons of Robert Archbishop of York.]
[Mr. Robert Drummond & Mr. Thomas Drummond, Sons of Robert Archbishop of York.]
B. West, pinxit, 1768. V. Green, fecit.
[n.d., c.1769.]
Mezzotint, proof before title. 615 x 385mm (24¼ x 15¼"). A fine impression, few creases. Unknown Collector's mark bottom right,
Double portrait of Robert Hay Drummond, Archbishop of York (1711 - 1776), Archbishop of York from 1761, and Thomas Auriol Hay Drummond (1752 - 1773). They stand side by side in conversation in partial, neo-classical interior, Robert indicating temple on hill in distance to left; globes, books and statue arranged around them. The print was exhibited at the Society of Arts in 1769. After Benjamin West (1738 - 1820). See 14761.
Whitman: 5, I. Chaloner Smith: 41, I. Ex: Collection of The Hon. C. Lennox-Boyd.
[Ref: 14764]   £580.00  
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

[A set of four etchings by Benjamin Green].
[A set of four etchings by Benjamin Green].
B. Green f.
Pub.d Nov.r 24, 1806, by Laurie & Whittle, 58 Fleet Street, London.
Four bound etchings. Platemark: 123 x 90mm (5 x 3½") each. Time staining to edges of sheets. Puncture holes in bottom margin on all four sheets. Bound at top margin by thread.
A set of four etchings by Benjamin Green (1739 - 1798), plates numbered 1 - 4. Plate 1; untitled, depicts three figures on a large boulder by the side of a path, with what appears to be a ruined building behind. Two other figures, one on horseback, can be seen in the distance. Plate 2; 'At Abingdon'. Two figures are stood outside a house with a ladder leaning up against it. A dog can be see to the right. Plate 3; 'At Islington'. A figure is sat in the foreground with a dog, facing towards a large Georgian house. A church spire can be seen in the background to the left. Plate 4; untitled scene at the waters edge, with a sailing boat in the centre. Two figures can be seen in the foreground, one kneeling down to a basket, the other standing. Green was one of the first English artists to use soft-ground etching (the technique employed here). Many of his plates were sold on to other publishers, with the result that impressions continued to be printed posthumously (as here).
DNB
[Ref: 31833]   £220.00   (£264.00 incl.VAT) view all images for this item
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

[Hackney]
[Hackney]
[C.J. Greenwood Del.t et Lith.] [****] & Son Litho. Ludgate Hill. London.
[London: n.d., c.1845.]
Scarce tinted lithograph. Image 220 x 345mm (8¾ x 13½"). Trimmed, losing most of the inscriptions, new margins added.
A railway bridge over a London street, with a locomotive passing.
[Ref: 56701]   £180.00   (£216.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Portrait of Joseph Charles Horsley,
Portrait of Joseph Charles Horsley, carried off by Charles Rennett, on the 8th. November, and recovered again at Brake, near Bremen, Novr. 23rd 1818.
J. Green pinxt. R. Cooper sculpt.
Published May 25th. 1819, at R. Ackermann's, 101, Strand.
Aquatint and etching, sheet 295 x 225mm (11½ x 9"). Trimmed to plate. Small amounts of foxing occur in the margins, over the title of the print and across the image itself.
Portrait of a young boy sitting facing the viewer and holding a flower, a terrier beside at right with sad expression. A dramatic mask with snake lies on the ground in the left foreground, sea behind. By sweet-talking a nursery-servant, Rennett kidnapped the three-year-old son of his first cousin, who had inherited an estate that Rennett felt should have been his. He absconded to Germany, where he was apprehended and brought back to England. Found guilty, Rennett was sentenced to seven years’ transportation to Australia.
See 53141 for a portrait of Rennell
[Ref: 53549]   £190.00   (£228.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

All is the gift of Industry; what e'er Delightful Exalts, embellishes, and renders life. Thomson.
All is the gift of Industry; what e'er Delightful Exalts, embellishes, and renders life. Thomson.
W. Green Delin. J. Allen sculpt.
Pub.d by Josiah Allen Colmore Row, Birmingham.
Engraving. 110 x 190mm (4¼ x 7½''). Marking and staining, trimmed to plate.
A view on a quay showing two men taking stock of barrels and boxes.
[Ref: 50015]   £70.00   (£84.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

[Kingfisher]
[Kingfisher]
9/60. Roland Green [pencil].
[n.d., c.1930.]
Etching, signed by the artist. 275 x 175mm (10¾ x 7". Some surface abrasions.
Roland J. Green (1890-1972) specialised in paintings and etchings of birds on the Norfolk Broads. Maybe a Kookaburra.
[Ref: 55676]   £180.00   (£216.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Messenger and Sons.
Messenger and Sons. Manufacturers of Chandeliers, Tripods, and Lamps, of every description in bronze and or-molu. Birmingham and London.
W Green del. W. Radclyffe sc.
Published by Radclyffes and Co. for their History of Birmingham and its Vicinity [1836].
Engraving, sheet 170 x 130mm (6¾ x 5").
Plate from 'Birmingham and its Vicinity as a Manufacturing and Commercial District' by William Hawkes Smith (1836), which included advertisements for several prominent Birmingham businesses.
[Ref: 46931]   £65.00   (£78.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Milford Haven and the Islands Adjacent most Humbly dedicated and presented to S.r Hugh Owen Bar.t by Cap,t G. Collins, Hydrographer to their Majesties.
Milford Haven and the Islands Adjacent most Humbly dedicated and presented to S.r Hugh Owen Bar.t by Cap,t G. Collins, Hydrographer to their Majesties.
[London: Mount & Page, c.1750.]
Coloured sea chart. 450 x 575mm (17¾ x 22½"). Splits in centre fold taped. Slight stain centre right margin.
A sea chart of western Wales, originally published in ''Great Britain's Coasting Pilot'' by Captain Greenvile Collins in 1693. This was the first English sea atlas of English waters, but many of the charts appeared in other sea atlases until the 1770s.
[Ref: 62547]   £160.00  
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

A Fleet in Being.
A Fleet in Being.
E.J. Greene 22-2-09 [in plate lower right.]
Presented with the Compliments of Callender's Cable & Construction Co. Ltd [c.1909].
Photogravure with etching, 215 x 340mm. 8½ x 13¼". Stain to sky upper left.
Warships from the Royal Navy fleet, each captioned in the image below. Printed for Callender's Cable & Construction Company to advertise their services. Original printed label attached to verso claims proudly "on all the ships depicted the main Electrical Distribution has been effected either entirely, or in part, by means of Callender's Cables & Special Boxes." Callender's, originally an importer and refiner of bitumen for road construction, began manufacturing insulated cables in the 1880s at their Erith site on the Thames.
From the collection of Cecil Bisshopp Harmsworth, 1st Baron Harmsworth.
[Ref: 9640]   £190.00   (£228.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

To His Grace the Duke of Newcastle,  This Print, being the third of a series of four Views of Nottingham Park,
To His Grace the Duke of Newcastle, This Print, being the third of a series of four Views of Nottingham Park, is most respectfully dedicated, By his obedient Servant Thos. Forman.
Published by Tho.s Forman, 14, Long Row, Nottingham, October, 1850.
Pair of very rare sepia tinted lithographs heightened in white, each sheet 340 x 440mm (13¼ x 17¼").
Cattle and figures, including marching soldiers, in the landscaped grounds of The Park Estate, a 150-acre private residential estate just to the west of Nottingham. It was built in what was once the deer park of Nottingham Castle. Major development began in the 1820s under the fourth Duke of Newcastle, despite much opposition from locals, who regarded the area as public land. Development continued under the Fifth Duke, Henry Pelham Clinton, who appointed Thomas Chambers Hine, the city's finest architect, to design the great houses. Today, the Park Estate is one of the most remarkable residential estates in the whole of the United Kingdom, and although many of the huge Victorian Gothic mansions have been converted into flats, it retains much of its original character, including the original gas lighting network believed to be one of the largest in Europe.
Not in Abbey Scenery.
[Ref: 13248]   £490.00   view all images for this item
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

A View of the Physic Gardens in the University of Oxford. [parallel text in French]
A View of the Physic Gardens in the University of Oxford. [parallel text in French]
J. Green delin et sculp
London, Printed for Rob.t Sayer, Map & Printseller No 53 in Fleet Street, as the Act directs 10 August 1773.
Engraving with original hand-colouring, platemark 340 x 460mm (13½ x 18"). Tears; very fine and rare.
Rare view of the Oxford Physic Garden, with putti presenting plans and scroll bearing the inscription on the entrance to the garden. The view focuses on the famous gateway and entrance portico built by Nicholas Stone after designs by Inigo Jones. Founded in 1621 by Henry Danvers, Earl of Danby, its purpose was the study of medicinal plants. Building the Garden, on the site of the former medieval Jewish cemetery, cost the enormous sum of £5000. Much of that sum went on the walls which enclosed the original garden, and comparatively little was left for plants! It was renamed the Oxford Botanic Garden in 1840 and is the oldest surviving physic and botanic garden in Britain.
[Ref: 38537]   £490.00  
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Paddy-Carr. Creek interpreteur.
Paddy-Carr. Creek interpreteur.
[F.W. Greenough]
Lith.d Col.d & Published by J.T. Bowen, Philada. [n.d. c.1838.]
Coloured lithograph. Sheet 228 x 146mm (9" x 5¾"). Stuck on scrap sheet. Crease above title area.
At the age of nineteen, Paddy Carr was principal interpreter for the Creek chiefs when they visited President John Quincy Adams in 1826 to protest bitterly the infamous Indian Springs treaty. The plate comes from the 'History of the Indian Tribes of North America Sketched of the Principal Chiefs'.
[Ref: 8902]   £70.00   (£84.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Partridges.
Partridges.
Drawn by Amos Green. Engraved by R.d Earlom.
London, Published July 1st 1824 by Z. Sweet, 38 Chancerry Lane.
Fine & Rare chine-collé mezzotint. 405 x 470mm (15¾ x 18½").
A partridge family surrounded by ferns in woodlands. An unusual early example of the chine-collé technique, still using laid paper for the print surface. The image area is larger than the upper paper, so some of the print is on the backing paper. The date of publication is two years after the death of the engraver, Richard Earlom.
[Ref: 53583]   £580.00  
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

The Hon. Sir Rich.d Perrott Bar.t.
The Hon. Sir Rich.d Perrott Bar.t. "Be thou as chaste as Ice, as pure as Snow, thou shalt not escape Calumny." Hamlet.
Val. Green, ad vivum delin.t et fecit, et excudit.
Printed for V. Green, Salisbury Street, Strand, London. ~ Published July 23.d 1770.
Scarce mezzotint. 330 x 227mm (13 x 9").
A portrait of Sir Richard Perrott (c.1716-96), '2nd Baronet, soldier and diplomat'. According to his own account of his life, reproduced in Burke's Peerage, he attended the Duke of Cumberland at Culloden in 1745 before entering the service of Frederick the Great of Prussia, for whom he fought in the Seven Years' War, becoming Fredrick's Lord High Admiral. He also came to the attention of Louis XV, who made him a baron. Back in England in 1767 he received a warrant confirming his baronetcy and in 1770, after bringing to George III a 'Loyal Flint Address' during the Wilkes Riots of 1770, received a letter of thanks and a medal, which he is wearing in this portrait. Vengeful rioters then ransacked his house in Park Lane, after which he departed for a trip to Italy. However, according to a lengthy article in the ''The Herald and Genealogist'' of 1874, Perrot was a fraudster, the son of 'a decayed distiller of Mardol, in Shrewsbury'. Impersonating foreign dignitaries he married and dumped a series of heiresses, using their money to finance other frauds. His house in Park Lane did not fall victim to rioters but baliffs representing the tradesmen who furnished it, after which he decided it was better to disappear.
Whitman: 15: ii of ii. CS: 101: ii of ii. Ex: Collection of The Hon. C. Lennox-Boyd.
[Ref: 14799]   £230.00   (£276.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

As Phoebus to the world, is science to the Soul. Beattie.
As Phoebus to the world, is science to the Soul. Beattie.
W. Green Delin. J. Allen sculpt.
Pub.d by Josiah Allen Colmore Row, Birmingham.
Engraving. 110 x 190mm (4¼ x 7½''). Marking and staining in margins, trimmed to plate.
An interior scene showing a man studying maps and and globe, with a line by poet James Beattie.
[Ref: 50013]   £70.00   (£84.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Great Meeting of the Political Unions, on New-Hall Hill, Birmingham, May 1832.
Great Meeting of the Political Unions, on New-Hall Hill, Birmingham, May 1832.
Green Del.t. Garnier sc.t.
London, Thomas Kelly [n.d., c.1835].
Engraving. Sheet: 215 x 285mm (8½ x 11¼"), with very large margins. Creasing. slight repair outer top margin.
In 1831 Grey's reform bill passed in the house and it was sent to the Lords. In May the Birmingham Political Unions gathered at Newhall Hill to put pressure on the Lords to pass the bill but it was rejected and large scale rioting took place throughout the country.
[Ref: 47508]   £75.00   (£90.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

[Two putti unveiling a rural scene.]
[Two putti unveiling a rural scene.]
I.H. Green delin et sculp.
[n.d., c.1810.]
Etching and aquatint, sheet 132 x 178mm. Light foxing.
A charming print, with putti flanking a picturesque view of a cottage next to a bridge over a river. Possibly a proof for an invitation to an exhibition of pictures, or intended for a peep show. By J.H. Green (fl. c.1801 - 1807), publisher and maker of satirical prints.
[Ref: 7584]   £220.00   (£264.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

The Harbour and Pier, Ramsgate. [&] The Bathing Place, Ramsgate.
The Harbour and Pier, Ramsgate. [&] The Bathing Place, Ramsgate.
Drawn by R. Green 1782. Engrav'd by V. Green & F. Jukes.
Publish'd July 8th 1782 by V. Green Mezzotinto Engraver to his Majesty & to the Elector Palatine, No.29 Newman Street, Oxford Street, London.
Pair of aquatints. Plate: 380 x 330mm (15 x 13"). Thread margins.
Two views of Ramsgate, the first shows the harbour with men at work laoding boats and couples walking along the pier, the second scene shows the bathing machines and bathing house at Ramsgate.
[Ref: 42511]   £480.00   view all images for this item
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

The Islands of Scilly.
The Islands of Scilly.
[after Captain Greenvile Collins.]
[London: Mount & Page, c.1770.]
Engraved sea chart with hand colour. 455 x 570mm (18 x 22½"), with scarce extra letterpress pasted underneath. Some staining and toning.
A detailed chart of the Scilly Islands, published in the first sea atlas of the British Isles, first issued in 1693. This example has extra letterpress, 'A true Description of the Setting of the Tides... taken by Abraham Tovey, Master Gunner at the said Islands', pasted underneath, meaning the map had to be folded twice to fit in the volume. In it Tovey writes 'mind Dhese directions, and Captain Collin's Draught of these Islands, and you will come in safe. Tovey (1687-1759) was responsible for maintaining the defences of the Scillys for many years.
[Ref: 57722]   £850.00  
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Sewerby House, From the South West.
Sewerby House, From the South West. The Seat of Yarburgh Greame Esq.r.
C. J. Greenwood Del.t. R. Groom litho.
Published by John Furby, Bookseller & c. High Street Bridlington. Printed by C. Moody, High Holborn. [n.d., c.1840].
Rare tinted lithograph. Sheet size: 335 x 390mm (13¼ x 15¼"). Slightly grubby in title.
An attractive view of Sewerby House, also known as Sewerby Hall, and grounds in Bridlington, Yorkshire, England. John Greame was the first of the Greame family to live at the old manor house at Sewerby, purchasing it from Elizabeth Carleill on the death of his father in 1708. He built the present Sewerby Hall between 1714 - 1720, replacing the manor house which had existed on the site for many years.
[Ref: 33505]   £180.00   (£216.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Shrubland Hall, Suffolk.
Shrubland Hall, Suffolk. The Seat Of Sir Wm. Middleton, Bart. To whom, by permission, this Print is respectfully dedicated.
C.J. Greenwood, Delt. E.H. Buckler Lith.
Published by W. Munro, Ipswich Street, Stowmarket. [n.d., c.1850.]
Sepia tinted lithograph heightened in white, image 240 x 335mm. 9½ x 13¼". Trimmed to printed border and glued to album page.
Shrubland Hall near Ipswich, Suffolk, was owned by Sir William F F Middleton, Baronet (1837; fl.). It is now a health farm. For a series of Suffolk country houses.
[Ref: 12928]   £180.00   (£216.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

John Parker's Manufactory & Show Rooms, for Silver & Plated Wares, Summer Row, Birmingham.
John Parker's Manufactory & Show Rooms, for Silver & Plated Wares, Summer Row, Birmingham. A Splendid assortment of the Most Fashionable Table Servies always on view... Orders for Exportation executed with the utmost dispatch.
W. Green Del. I. Tye Sculp.t.
[n.d., c.1825.]
Rare engraving, J. Whatman 1825 watermark. 355 x 230mm (14 x 9"), large margins. Some restoration.
A large scarce advertisment, with an elevation of the premises and a display of tableware.
[Ref: 59647]   £260.00   (£312.00 incl.VAT)
enquire about this item add to your wishlist

Windsor Castle.
Windsor Castle. Taken from the South Western Railway Bridge.
C.J. Greenwood Lith. Printed by S. Straker, London.
Published by W.F. Taylor, Library Windsor, May, 1851.
Hand coloured tinted lithograph, scarce. Shet size: 335 x 410mm (13 x 16"). Light foxing. Slight crease at top. Chips to bottom edge of sheet.
A view of Windsor Castle, in the distance to the left, with the South Western Railway Bridge spanning the river Thames in the foreground to the right. The Windsor Railway Bridge, as it is known today, first opened in 1849 and was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel born 9th April 1806.
[Ref: 33556]   £360.00  
enquire about this item add to your wishlist