AN EARLY VICTORIAN ARM CHAIR MADE FROM THE TIMBER OF H.M.S. TEMERAIRE
the back with scroll cresting inscribed ENGLAND EXPECTS EVERY MAN TO DO HIS DUTY OCT 21 1805 TEMERAIRE TRAFALGAR, with leather padded scroll arm supports and seat on bulbous legs -- 47½in. (120.5cm.) high
When Temeraire was designated for scrapping in 1838, she was purchased by John Beatson and sent to his Rotherhithe yard for breaking. Beatson well understood the significance of the timber he was handling and sold quantities of it for use in furniture and buildings as well as decorative objects.
Named after the first Temeraire which had been captured from the French in 1759, the second and far more famous Temeraire in the Royal Navy was the vessel laid down at Chatham and launched on 11th September 1798. A large second rate mounting 98-guns, she spent her first three years as flagship to the Channel Fleet and, after a spell blockading the French coast, then found herself directly behind Victory in Lord Nelson's 'weather column' at Trafalgar where she fought magnificently. Heavily engaged from all sides but eventually capturing the 80-gun Fougueux, she survived the battle but was so severely damaged that she was deemed unfit for further service at sea. Thereafter employed as a prison ship and later a receiving ship at both Devonport as well as Sheerness, she was finally sold for breaking in 1838 and, whilst under tow to Rotherhithe, found immortality when she inspired J.M.W. Turner to paint one of his most celebrated works, The Fighting Temeraire.
Sold for £5,208
Estimated at £2,000 - £3,000
(inc. buyer's premium of 24%)
AN EARLY VICTORIAN ARM CHAIR MADE FROM THE TIMBER OF H.M.S. TEMERAIRE
the back with scroll cresting inscribed ENGLAND EXPECTS EVERY MAN TO DO HIS DUTY OCT 21 1805 TEMERAIRE TRAFALGAR, with leather padded scroll arm supports and seat on bulbous legs -- 47½in. (120.5cm.) high
When Temeraire was designated for scrapping in 1838, she was purchased by John Beatson and sent to his Rotherhithe yard for breaking. Beatson well understood the significance of the timber he was handling and sold quantities of it for use in furniture and buildings as well as decorative objects.
Named after the first Temeraire which had been captured from the French in 1759, the second and far more famous Temeraire in the Royal Navy was the vessel laid down at Chatham and launched on 11th September 1798. A large second rate mounting 98-guns, she spent her first three years as flagship to the Channel Fleet and, after a spell blockading the French coast, then found herself directly behind Victory in Lord Nelson's 'weather column' at Trafalgar where she fought magnificently. Heavily engaged from all sides but eventually capturing the 80-gun Fougueux, she survived the battle but was so severely damaged that she was deemed unfit for further service at sea. Thereafter employed as a prison ship and later a receiving ship at both Devonport as well as Sheerness, she was finally sold for breaking in 1838 and, whilst under tow to Rotherhithe, found immortality when she inspired J.M.W. Turner to paint one of his most celebrated works, The Fighting Temeraire.
Auction: Maritime and Scientific Models, Instruments & Art (Venerable), 24th Nov, 2020
Mercantile : 1-98
Naval : 101-179
Instruments : 181-295
Printed catalogues available at £20 (+P&P)
THIS SALE WILL BE CONDUCTED LIVE ONLINE ONLY
You will not be able to bid live in the room. Absentee bids may be left via the website or using a bid form or you can bid via one of three online platforms. Unfortunately, we cannot offer telephone bidding for this sale
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