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The S. Y. St George Expeditionary Medicine Box by Burroughs, Wellcome & Co of London c.1924 (1 of 16)
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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Unit 2 Riverside Business Park

Lymington

Hampshire

United Kingdom

SO41 9BB

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By Appointment Only

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LoveAntiques Dealersince Jan 2019Approved item507 sales by dealer

The S. Y. St George Expeditionary Medicine Box by Burroughs, Wellcome & Co of London c.1924

REF: LA548028
£2,800
€3,199
$3,700
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LoveAntiques Dealersince Jan 2019Approved item507 sales by dealer
Description
The S. Y. St George Expeditionary Medicine Box by Burroughs, Wellcome and Co., London, c.1924 A hinged rectangular japanned tin box with a green interior, and two extendable drawers. The interior with pullout drawers containing and extensive range of medicines, including unopened “Iron and Arsonic” many still unopnened. Footnote:- The medicine chest or box of japanned tin, complete with the majority of its original contents, many items unopened and unused. This model of medicine chest, known as the Tabloid, was made by Burroughs, Wellcome and Co. for many years. An advert in the Wellcome Collection illustrates the range of situations for which such a piece might have been useful and the firm quickly hit upon the idea of supplying these chests free of charge to all of the major expeditions of the time. As a result, chests of this type were supplied to Henry Morton Stanley (now in the Science Museum). President Teddy Roosevelt for his African expedition in 1909 (also in the Science Museum) and another example, supplied in 1924, was used in the Mount Everest expedition of that year. Like the Everest example, our piece has red stencilled lettering on it, in this case revealing that it was supplied to the Steam Yacht St George. Originally built in 1890 and one of the most luxurious yachts on the seas, she sailed under the Royal Yacht Squadron burgee until co-opted for military work during the outbreak of WWI. By 1924 she had been purchased by the company Research Expeditions Ltd. The vessel was pressed in to service for a scientific expedition to the South Seas, designed to replicate in part Charles Darwin’s earlier expedition to the same area. The present medicine box would have been supplied at this point. The St George was equipped with up to date laboratories and photographic dark rooms and the exceptional maritime artist Montague Dawson, a very young man at this stage and not yet fully established, was commissioned as official artist for the voyage and tasked with recording views and events both for posterity and for transmission to publishers in London to be reproduced in a regular column in the Graphic newspaper. Dawson loved painting the many romantic islands as he called them and this project kickstarted his career. Specimens collected on the voyage were donated to the Natural History Museum where they remain to this day, having made an important contribution to western knowledge about the flora and fauna in the South Pacific. The scientific team on the voyage published many of their findings in an article titled The Expedition to the South Pacific of the S.Y. “St. George.” Marine Ecology and Coral Formations in the Panama Region, the Galapagos and Marquesas Islands, and the Atoll of Napuka, published in Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh Vol. 55 Issue 2 in 1927. The south sea voyage was dogged by technical issues related to illness on board the ship so there is no doubt that the present case and its contents would have been pressed into service. It is a fascinating artifact of the age of exploration and we are delighted to offer it for sale.
measurements
Height:
8 in
Width:
15 in
Depth:
10 in
5.5:
Open Height in
33:
Open width in
10.5:
Open depth in
declaration
Wick Antiques Ltd has clarified that the The S. Y. St George Expeditionary Medicine Box by Burroughs, Wellcome & Co of London c.1924 (LA548028) is genuinely of the period declared with the date/period of manufacture being c.1924
location
This The S. Y. St George Expeditionary Medicine Box by Burroughs, Wellcome & Co of London c.1924 is located in Hampshire, United Kingdom
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