A GENTLEMAN'S EAU DE NIL POPLIN WAISTCOAT
A GENTLEMAN'S EAU DE NIL POPLIN WAISTCOAT

POSSIBLY BELONGING TO THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON, FIRST QUARTER 19TH CENTURY

Details
A GENTLEMAN'S EAU DE NIL POPLIN WAISTCOAT
POSSIBLY BELONGING TO THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON, FIRST QUARTER 19TH CENTURY
the skirts short, with stand up collar and two pockets, with seven cut steel and paste buttons, lined in bleached cotton, with two silk ties at the back
Provenance
By repute from the personal property of the painter Andrew Morton.

Lot Essay

This waistcoat is said to have been given by the the first Duke of Wellington, Arthur Wellesley (1769-1852), to his friend, the painter Andrew Morton (1802-1845), who painted his Grace on many occasions. One of his portraits entitled, The Duke of Wellington with Colonel Gurwood at Apsley House, painted in 1840, is held in the Wallace Collection and depicts his Grace seated in his study, wearing a similar waistcoat to the one sold in this lot.

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