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Fine William IV Period Rosewood Library Table by George Simson & Son of St Paul’s Churchyard - London c.1837 (1 of 13)
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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Address

Unit 2 Riverside Business Park

Lymington

Hampshire

United Kingdom

SO41 9BB

Opening times

By Appointment Only

Mobile

+447768 877069

LoveAntiques Dealersince Jan 2019Approved item507 sales by dealer

Fine William IV Period Rosewood Library Table by George Simson & Son of St Paul’s Churchyard - London c.1837

REF: LA537300
£5,400
€6,170
$7,136
Connectwith WhatsApp
LoveAntiques Dealersince Jan 2019Approved item507 sales by dealer
Description
Fine William IV Period Rosewood Library Table by George Simson & Son of St Paul’s Churchyard, London, c.1837. The finely shaped rectangular top with rounded corners, supported on a plain frieze with inset cock-beaded drawers. Supported upon twin end supports with foliate carved columns and leafy bases. The rosewood utilised throughout of the highest quality colour and figure. Aside from its obvious desirability based on the quality of construction and timbers used, this table provides a fascinating insight in to the activities of George Simson, the well known St Paul’s Churchyard cabinetmaker, towards the end of his long career. Unlike most English makers of the period, a surprising number of pieces of furniture with Simson’s label on them are known to survive. Many of these pieces are illustrated in Christopher Gilbert’s Pictorial Dictionary of Marked London Furniture and, according to this source and others cited on BIFMO, there are two known Simson variant labels. Our piece would appear to be the first documented example of a piece of furniture with the Simson and Son label as opposed to Simson alone. Evidence suggests that the firm operated as Simson and Son from c.1835 until the closure of the business in 1839 and given the stylistic features of this piece it is likely that our table dates to c.1837-39. This piece is a highly significant discovery. George Simson:- Born the son of a Kentish surgeon and apothecary, Simson was apprenticed in 1772 and free of the Upholder’s Company in 1780. He is known to have been based at his 19 St Paul’s Churchyard address from at least 1787 and continued in business at the same premises until the closure of the firm in 1839. Simson was one of the subscribers to Thomas Sheraton’s Drawing Book of 1793 and was included by Sheraton in his list of master cabinetmakers published in his Cabinet Dictionary in 1803. Insurance records show that Simson clearly had an extremely large business but sadly little is known of his clientele. Surviving payments indicate that he supplied substantial amounts of furniture and upholstery to Gorhambury House in Hertfordshire and the 2nd Viscount Palmerston was also a customer, probably in conjunction with his refurbishment of Broadlands in Hampshire. Another interesting aspect of Simson’s business is that it has been suggested that he was the maker of the fine series of secretaire cabinets, some with clock movements in the pediments, that were retailed by the Thomas Weeks Museum in Tichborne Street in the regency period. Examples of these Weeks cabinets survive in numerous museum and private collections including at Temple Newsam in Leeds. Simson died aged 83 in 1840, a year after closing his business. He was clearly an enterprising maker who enjoyed significant success over a prolonged period and the quality of his pieces was high, as demonstrated by the present piece.
measurements
Height:
28 in
Width:
55.5 in
Depth:
8.5 in
declaration
Wick Antiques Ltd has clarified that the Fine William IV Period Rosewood Library Table by George Simson & Son of St Paul’s Churchyard - London c.1837 (LA537300) is genuinely of the period declared with the date/period of manufacture being c.1837
additional info
location
This Fine William IV Period Rosewood Library Table by George Simson & Son of St Paul’s Churchyard - London c.1837 is located in Hampshire, United Kingdom
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