THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN
4A PAIR OF GEORGE I WALNUT SIDE CHAIRS, each with arched rectangular padded back and seat covered in close-nailed earlier floral tapestry with blue patterned moreen backs, on cabriole legs and pad feet, both lacking pieces to brackets (2)

Details
4A PAIR OF GEORGE I WALNUT SIDE CHAIRS, each with arched rectangular padded back and seat covered in close-nailed earlier floral tapestry with blue patterned moreen backs, on cabriole legs and pad feet, both lacking pieces to brackets (2)
Provenance
Possibly commissioned in the 1720's by Admiral George Delaval for Seaton Delaval, Yorkshire
Possibly transferred to Doddington Hall, Lincolnshire, circa 1764
Thence by descent to Major C. F. C. Jarvis, Doddington Hall, sold in these Rooms, 2 May 1929, lot 73 (a set of six) and purchased by an ancestor of the present owner. An old valuation in the owner's family records that they were purchased on the same day as the Portland Vase sale

Lot Essay

Doddington Hall's historic furnishings include the 'Cumberland' bed from Seaton Delaval, Yorkshire. It dates from the beginning of King George II's reign and was occupied in 1745 by his son the Duke of Cumberland (d.1765), the hero of Culloden. Following its inheritance by Edward Hussey Delaval, F.R.S. (d.1814), the bed was transferred to Doddington. It is possible that these chairs also originated from the Seaton Delaval state apartment and were transferred to Doddington, having been commissioned by Admiral George Delaval in the early 1720's. They relate to the contemporary chairs provided for Chicksands Priory, Bedfordshire, which accompanied Mary of Modena's bed and tapestries (see; D.Watkin, The Royal Interiors of Regency England, London, 1984, p.54) A related suite of chairs at Knole in Kent is illustrated in J.Fowler and J.Cornforth, English Decoration in the 18th Century, London, 1974, p.120

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