A VICTORIAN POLYCHROME-DECORATED OAK TRADE SIGN IN THE FORM OF A HIGHLAND SCOT
A VICTORIAN POLYCHROME-DECORATED OAK TRADE SIGN IN THE FORM OF A HIGHLAND SCOT

PROBABLY SCOTTISH, LATE 19TH CENTURY

Details
A VICTORIAN POLYCHROME-DECORATED OAK TRADE SIGN IN THE FORM OF A HIGHLAND SCOT
Probably Scottish, late 19th century
The figure standing with left foot forward as if walking, dressed in traditional garb with green kilt and sash over a red jacket with parcel-gilt collar and belt, holding a dirk in his right hand and wearing a hat, on an integral square base with canted corners inscribed TOBACCO/SNUFF/CIGARS, nose replaced
38in. (96.5cm.) high overall

Lot Essay

After the Act of Union between England and Scotland in 1707, Glasgow became one of the chief ports for the importation of American tobacco. Consequently, the figure of a Highlander became a common sign for a tobacconist, frequently represented holding a snuff mull of horn with a pinch of snuff in the raised hand.

In the 1720s, the shop of the tobacconist David Wishart ('at ye Highlander, Thistle and Crown', Coventry Street, London) became something of a Jacobite rendezvous. Wishhart was one of the first tobacconists to use the figure of a Highlander as a sign, but the Blackamoor and tobacco roll were more traditional subjects for signs at these shops.

Other related figures include one illustrated in E.H. Pinto, Treen and other Wooden Bygones, 1969, p. 439. Another eighteenth century figure from the Judkyn/Pratt Collection of British Folk Art was sold Christie's South Kensington, 8 November 1995, lot 86. A further Georgian figure from the same collection was sold in these Rooms, 21-22 January 1998, lot 346 ($6,900).

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