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Twelve Dinner Plates from Admiral Lord Bridport’s Seagoing Silver Service, 1785-1787 (1 of 6)
Wick Antiques Ltd
Flag of United KingdomHampshire, UK
Wick Antiques was established by Charles Wallrock in the early 1980s. Having grown up in the Antiques world Charles developed an extensive wealth of knowledge. Starting out as a ‘man with a van’ he quickly gained a good reputation and embarked on a longstanding relationship with Harrods. He was later joined by his wife, Caroline Wallrock. Caroline having completed a Persian degree, went on to study at Christie’s fine art and then joined Sotheby’s specializing in Islamic and Japanese works of art, as well as taking the occasional auction. Together they make a formidable team with extensive knowledge and buy and sell some of the best items on the market.
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Twelve Dinner Plates from Admiral Lord Bridport’s Seagoing Silver Service, 1785-1787

REF: LA206274
£32,000
€37,381
$40,252
Certified DealerApproved listing345 sales by dealer
Certified DealerApproved listing345 sales by dealer
Description
Twelve dinner plates from Admiral Lord Bridport’s seagoing silver service, 1785-7 Each of these twelve George III circular silver dinner plates, by Andrew Fogelberg & Stephen Gilbert, London 1785-7, has a shaped and gadrooned rim. Seven plates are dated 1785 with incuse duty marks and five plates are dated 1787. The set was later engraved, between 1794 and 1800, with the heraldic family crest of Hood for Admiral Alexander Hood, first Baron Bridport K.B., later Viscount Bridport, within a garter inscribed Tria Juncta in Uno for the Order of the Bath, surmounted by a baron’s coronet. Part of our Britain on the High Seas collection. Alexander Hood, Viscount Bridport (1726-1814) entered the Royal Navy in 1741, a few weeks before his elder brother Samuel, later Admiral Viscount Hood (1724- 1816). Made post captain in 1756, Hood served through the Seven Years War commanding Minerva, 32 guns,at the Battle of Quiberon Bay on 20 November 1759. In 1761, Minerva joined the squadron which escorted Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg to England for her marriage to King George III. In a further sign of royal favour, Hood was then given command of the royal yacht Katherine III. In 1780, he was made rear-admiral and, with peace, turned his attention to politics as member of parliament for Bridgwater in Somerset. In 1782, he joined the relief of Gibraltar in Queen, 90 guns. On 7 May 1788 he was made Knight of the Bath and, with the outbreak of war with France in 1793, hoisted his flag in Royal George, 100 guns. In April 1794, Hood was made admiral shortly before he fought at the Battle of the First of June for which he received a naval gold medal and was created Baron Bridport in the Irish peerage (matched in the British peerage two years later). In 1796, Bridport was placed in command of the Channel Fleet in which position he was soon thrust into the Spithead Mutiny when he adopted a sympathetic approach to the seamen’s grievances, earning their gratitude and respect. Until April 1800 Bridport maintained the blockade of Brest with never less than 28 warships, a highly complex and stressful task which, now in his seventies and after nearly sixty years of service, took a heavy toll on his health. Made Viscount Bridport in 1801, he retired to Cricket St Thomas, his home in Somerset, where he died in 1814. On his death, Bridport’s viscountcy lapsed, but he was succeeded as second Baron Bridport by his great nephew Samuel Hood, who married Charlotte Mary Nelson (1787-1873), only daughter of first Earl Nelson and niece of Admiral Viscount Nelson. Admiral Lord Bridport’s set of silver plates was decorated following his introduction to the Order of the Bath in 1794, but before his elevation in the peerage as Viscount Bridport in 1800. Of plain design with rope- like gadrooned borders – a pattern popular among naval officers, including Admiral Viscount Nelson – the service was designed for entertaining at sea and may have been in Royal George at the time of the Battle of the First of June. As Bridport’s barony, his collections and Cricket St Thomas passed to Samuel and Charlotte Hood after his death, this set of plates would eventually be joined by silver, medals and relics belonging to Admiral Viscount Nelson inherited by Charlotte from her father Earl Nelson in 1835. In 1868, the Bridport viscountcy was revived by Queen Victoria for the Hoods’ son Alexander (1814- 1904), named for his great, great uncle. In 1895 the Bridport and Nelson silver was sold at Christies. Diameter: approx. 9 3⁄4 in (25cm); Total weight: approx. 200 oz. troy / 6200grams
measurements
Width:
9.75 IN
declaration
Wick Antiques Ltd has clarified that the Twelve Dinner Plates from Admiral Lord Bridport’s Seagoing Silver Service, 1785-1787 (LA206274) is genuinely of the period declared with the date/period of manufacture being 1785-7
additional info
Material:
Origin:
Date of Manufacture:
1785-7
location
This Twelve Dinner Plates from Admiral Lord Bridport’s Seagoing Silver Service, 1785-1787 is located in Hampshire, United Kingdom

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