A TEAK SIDE TABLE OF MARITIME INTEREST
This lot will be removed to an off-site warehouse … Read more PROPERTY REMOVED FROM A BASQUE COUNTRY HOUSE
A TEAK SIDE TABLE OF MARITIME INTEREST

EARLY 20TH CENTURY

Details
A TEAK SIDE TABLE OF MARITIME INTEREST
EARLY 20TH CENTURY
The brass plaque engraved with an inscription: THE WOOD OF WHICH THIS TABLE IS MADE IS PART OF THETIS SPANISH FRIGATE. CAPTURED ..BY NAIAD, TRITON, ETHALION & ALCMENE ON 17TH OCTOBER 1799
29¾ in. (75.5 cm.) high; 34 in. (86.5 cm.) wide; 19 in. (48.2 cm.) deep
Provenance
By repute timber from the Spanish frigate Thetis
Special notice
This lot will be removed to an off-site warehouse at the close of business on the day of sale - 2 weeks free storage

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Lot Essay

On the evening of 15th October 1799, the 38-gun British frigate Naiad, Captain Pierrepont, was patrolling off the coast of Spain when she sighted two 34-gun enemy frigates, the Santa-Brigida and the Thetis. Regardless of the odds against him, Pierrepont gave chase and, before dawn the following morning, also sighted the British frigate Ethalion, Captain James Young, which also joined the pursuit. At 7.00am. on the 16th the two Spaniards parted company and Pierrepont directed Captain Young to go after the Thetis whilst he engaged her consort. Despite her adversary's head-start, Ethalion's sailing qualities soon became apparent and, by 11.30am., she had caught up with the Thetis and begun to engage her in a furious action. Despite negligible casualties on both sides, Thetis only withstood the battering for an hour before striking her colours and surrendering. Only upon capture however, did Captain Young realise quite what a prize he had secured; instead of the usual contraband of war, Young discovered that Thetis was, in fact, homeward-bound from Vera Cruz (Mexico) with a priceless cargo of specie worth 1,385,292 Spanish dollars. The booty, which equated to 311,690 sterling, made Young a very rich man and, after successive promotions, he died a Vice-Admiral in 1833.

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