THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
A GEORGE III SATINWOOD AND ROSEWOOD WRITING-TABLE

POSSIBLY BY GILLOWS

Details
A GEORGE III SATINWOOD AND ROSEWOOD WRITING-TABLE
Possibly by Gillows
The kidney-shaped green leather-lined top crossbanded with rosewood above a crossbanded frieze with two mahogany-lined end-drawers, on square tapering legs with brass caps and castors, the interior of one drawer inscribed in ink 'Library', the underside inscribed in ink 'S.H. Middleton'
41 in. (102 cm.) wide; 29 in. (74 cm.) high; 21 in. (53 cm.) deep
Provenance
Possibly supplied to Sir Charles Miles Lambert Monck (formerly Middleton), 6th Bt., for Belsay Hall, Northumberland.
Thence by descent to Sir Stephen Hugh Middleton, 9th Bt.

Lot Essay

Belsay Hall was built between 1807-17 for Sir Charles Monck, 6th Bt. (1779-1867) who in 1799 had changed his name from Middleton. Belsay Hall was built to his own designs in a severely neo-classical style. The most impressive room was the library, the design of its oak bookcases deriving from the Erechtheion and much of the furniture being supplied by Gillows. The library is illustrated in C. Hussey, English Country Houses, Late Georgian 1800-1840, London, 1958, fig. 158.
A sketch for a similar writing-table appears in the Gillows Estimate Sketch Books, dated 1787, and is illustrated in L. Boynton (ed.), Gillow Furniture Designs 1760-1800, Royston, 1995, fig.39.

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