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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)
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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)
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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)
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[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)
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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
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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)
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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)
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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  
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