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Auction archive: Lot number 0347

A RARE 18TH-CENTURY UN-RIGGED 1:32 SCALE

Estimate
£20,000 - £30,000
ca. US$32,188 - US$48,283
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 0347

A RARE 18TH-CENTURY UN-RIGGED 1:32 SCALE

Estimate
£20,000 - £30,000
ca. US$32,188 - US$48,283
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

A RARE 18TH-CENTURY UN-RIGGED 1:32 SCALE DOCKYARD MODEL FOR A SIX-GUN ADMIRALTY YACHT BELIEVED TO REPRESENT THE OLD PORTSMOUTH AS FITTED IN 1752 with 20in. pipe hull finely carved and hollowed from the solid, planked and pinned with treenail's over ebony wales, chain plates with deadeyes, Venetian red bulwarks delicately painted with swags and trophies, quarter badges with mica windows, polychrome caryatids and tafferel characters sounding trumpets, the paper-covered chequerboard deck with fittings including anchor/sail winch with pawl and belaying rails, hatches, cut-away mast and bowsprit, companionway with sliding roof to observation deck with mica windows and seat over, capstan and tiller, mounted on turned wooden columns to walnut display base (restoration and conservation). Overall measurements -- 12 x 23in. (30.5 x 58.5cm.) Travel case. Literature: Lyon, D: The Sailing Navy List, Conway, 1993, p. 303 Winfield, R: British Warships in the Age of Sail, 1714-1792, Seaforth 2007, p.362 Discovered close to Salisbury, UK, it's possible this model has only moved a few miles since built approximately two and a half centuries ago. Largely complete but untidy, it has been possible with careful research to present the model correctly. A figurehead might have aided a firmer attribution, however the dimensions and number of guns suggest just two or three related candidates - the Portsmouth (1702), rebuilt as Old Portsmouth (1741), which in turn was rebuilt as Medina (1772) and which also became the official transport to the Governor of the Isle of Wight. Typical early 18th-Century Admiralty models use open-framed boxwood hulls, so the use of a thinly carved fully-represented hull suggests later modelling, however the vessel has several quite old fashioned features - the wreathed gun ports (the wreaths are missing, but there's evidence for them), the low freeboard are features which were dispensed with on small craft later in the century, so Medina seems less likely, leaving Old Portsmouth as the likliest candidate. Little is known about Old Portsmouth but it appears she was originally built in 1702/3 as the Portsmouth by master shipwright Thomas Podd for use by the Dockyard Superintendent, and her measurements of 50ft x 15ft with six 2-pdr guns conform to the scale of this model. With a new vessel named Portsmouth launched for the Superintendent in 1741, this yacht became Old Portsmouth and in 1752 she was ordered to be fitted for the use of the young gentlemen of the (naval) Academy (at Portsmouth). In 1772 she underwent a "Great Repair" and was renamed Medina and fitted for use by the Governor of the Isle of Wight until 1832 when she was finally broken up after 130 years of service.

Auction archive: Lot number 0347
Auction:
Datum:
30 Oct 2013
Auction house:
Charles Miller Ltd.
Imperial Road 3/11
Suite 6 Imperial Studios
London, SW6 2AG
United Kingdom
enquiries@charlesmillerltd.com
+44 (0)207 806 5530
+44 (0)207 806 5531
Beschreibung:

A RARE 18TH-CENTURY UN-RIGGED 1:32 SCALE DOCKYARD MODEL FOR A SIX-GUN ADMIRALTY YACHT BELIEVED TO REPRESENT THE OLD PORTSMOUTH AS FITTED IN 1752 with 20in. pipe hull finely carved and hollowed from the solid, planked and pinned with treenail's over ebony wales, chain plates with deadeyes, Venetian red bulwarks delicately painted with swags and trophies, quarter badges with mica windows, polychrome caryatids and tafferel characters sounding trumpets, the paper-covered chequerboard deck with fittings including anchor/sail winch with pawl and belaying rails, hatches, cut-away mast and bowsprit, companionway with sliding roof to observation deck with mica windows and seat over, capstan and tiller, mounted on turned wooden columns to walnut display base (restoration and conservation). Overall measurements -- 12 x 23in. (30.5 x 58.5cm.) Travel case. Literature: Lyon, D: The Sailing Navy List, Conway, 1993, p. 303 Winfield, R: British Warships in the Age of Sail, 1714-1792, Seaforth 2007, p.362 Discovered close to Salisbury, UK, it's possible this model has only moved a few miles since built approximately two and a half centuries ago. Largely complete but untidy, it has been possible with careful research to present the model correctly. A figurehead might have aided a firmer attribution, however the dimensions and number of guns suggest just two or three related candidates - the Portsmouth (1702), rebuilt as Old Portsmouth (1741), which in turn was rebuilt as Medina (1772) and which also became the official transport to the Governor of the Isle of Wight. Typical early 18th-Century Admiralty models use open-framed boxwood hulls, so the use of a thinly carved fully-represented hull suggests later modelling, however the vessel has several quite old fashioned features - the wreathed gun ports (the wreaths are missing, but there's evidence for them), the low freeboard are features which were dispensed with on small craft later in the century, so Medina seems less likely, leaving Old Portsmouth as the likliest candidate. Little is known about Old Portsmouth but it appears she was originally built in 1702/3 as the Portsmouth by master shipwright Thomas Podd for use by the Dockyard Superintendent, and her measurements of 50ft x 15ft with six 2-pdr guns conform to the scale of this model. With a new vessel named Portsmouth launched for the Superintendent in 1741, this yacht became Old Portsmouth and in 1752 she was ordered to be fitted for the use of the young gentlemen of the (naval) Academy (at Portsmouth). In 1772 she underwent a "Great Repair" and was renamed Medina and fitted for use by the Governor of the Isle of Wight until 1832 when she was finally broken up after 130 years of service.

Auction archive: Lot number 0347
Auction:
Datum:
30 Oct 2013
Auction house:
Charles Miller Ltd.
Imperial Road 3/11
Suite 6 Imperial Studios
London, SW6 2AG
United Kingdom
enquiries@charlesmillerltd.com
+44 (0)207 806 5530
+44 (0)207 806 5531
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