A JAMAICAN SATINWOOD, ROSEWOOD AND SPECIMEN WOOD GAMES TABLE
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A JAMAICAN SATINWOOD, ROSEWOOD AND SPECIMEN WOOD GAMES TABLE

BY RALPH TURNBULL, KINGSTON, JAMAICA, JANUARY 30TH 1835

Details
A JAMAICAN SATINWOOD, ROSEWOOD AND SPECIMEN WOOD GAMES TABLE
BY RALPH TURNBULL, KINGSTON, JAMAICA, JANUARY 30TH 1835
The removable top inlaid to the underside with a chess board, opening to reveal specimen wood backgammon board tray with a specimen wood panel below with its corresponding key describing each specimen wood, key inscribed 'Reference to a chess table, Ralph Turnbull, Kingston, Jamaica, January 30th 1835', including various games pieces, the frieze with two drawers above a facetted column on outspread legs
31 in. (78.8 cm.) high; 34¾ in. (88 cm.) wide; 17½ in. (44.5 cm.) deep
Literature
1851 Inventory, Bow Drawing Room, 'Chess table with men & c. - £3.10.0'
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

The Drawing Room sofa-table conceals games-boards beneath its reversible central slide, which displays a Roman mosaic of fine Jamaican woods in lozenged compartments. With its plinth-supported altar-pillar raised on Grecian-scrolled and palm-flowered trusses, it reflects the William IV French/antique fashion popularised by John C. Loudons, Encyclopaedia of Cottage, Farm and Villa Architecture and Furniture, 1833. The plan identifying its parquetried woods is dated 1835 and bears the inscription of the celebrated Kingston cabinet-maker Ralph Turnbull (fl. 1820-1840) of Harbour Street, who received a Premium from the Jamaican House of Assembly for his timber research in 1834. At the same time he was patronised by William IV’s Governor of Jamaica, the Marquis of Sligo of Westport House, Ireland (P. Carson, 'Jamaican Regency Furniture 1815-1840', The Jamaican, December 1999, pp.74-75). There is a similar games-table, also incorporating woods from the Sligo estates in Jamaica, at Westport House (M. Girouard, 'Westport House, Co. Mayo, Ireland', Country Life, 6 May 1965, pp.1074-1077).

Jamaica was central to Sir John Gladstone's business, and he acquired large sugar plantations on the Island. As with the many other parts of the world where he did business, works of art and furniture from those places entered his magnificent collection.

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