THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
AN IRISH REGENCY YEW-WOOD OR ARBUTUS WORK-TABLE

BY BELL OF ENNISKILLEN AND CAVAN

Details
AN IRISH REGENCY YEW-WOOD OR ARBUTUS WORK-TABLE
By Bell Of Enniskillen and Cavan
The shaped top with two rectangular panels flanking a raised and moulded square plinth, above a cedar-lined frieze drawer and simulated drawer to each side, centered by a cream-cotton lined work-basket, on lyre-shaped end-supports, sabre legs capped with lotus-leaves joined by a reeded and baluster stretcher, with lion-paw brass caps and castors, , with paper label inscribed 'BELL CABINET MAKER AND UPHOLSTERER ENNISKILLEN AND CAVAN'
41¾ in. (106 cm.) wide; 28½ in. (72.5 cm.) high; 17 in. (45 cm.) deep

Lot Essay

The Mediterranean tree shrub arbutus unedo has always flourished in the mild and damp climate of western Ireland. In the 19th Century it became the standard cabinet-making wood at Killarney in the far south west. Although Cavan and Enniskillen are over one hundred miles from Killarney it is possible that this sofa table is made of arbutus rather than yew.
Bell is largely unrecorded, although a 'sofa table', possibly this work-table, is listed in the Victoria and Albert Museum archives with this label (The Dictionary of English Furniture Makers, Leeds, 1986, p. 61).

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