David Neligan Antiques Racks and Stands
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Late Regency Rosewood Bookstand
Located in Essex, MA
Adapted. The book carrier section which is early 19c is attached to a later base.
Category
Antique 1810s English Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Mahogany, Rosewood
Regency Mahogany And Brass Peat Bucket
Located in Essex, MA
Cylindrical tapered with a pair of carrying handles. Brass strapping.
Category
Antique 1820s English Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Brass
Arts and Crafts Leather and Brass Stud Umbrella Stand
Located in Essex, MA
With a rich wonderfully brown leather over a wood foundation with brass tacks. Opening with brass dividing bar.
Category
Antique Late 19th Century American Arts and Crafts Umbrella Stands
Materials
Brass
Regency Style Mahogany Canterbury
Located in Essex, MA
Typical form with a drawer, turned legs and casters. Ex Juan Montoya.
Category
Antique Early 19th Century English Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Mahogany
Victorian Gothic Revival Oak Umbrella Stand
Located in Essex, MA
Rectangular with four section top opening for canes or umbrellas. Four chamfered square supports joining a plinth base holding a tin tray.
Category
Antique 1870s English Victorian Umbrella Stands
Materials
Oak
Early Victorian Rosewood Canterbury
Located in Essex, MA
Unusual form with an arched rack with leaf carved base. Single drawer with wood knobs. Turned legs and casters.
Category
Antique 1830s English Early Victorian Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Rosewood
Unusual Biedermeier Birch Quartetto Music Stand
Located in Essex, MA
Almost square top with four pull out drawers in the frieze exposing music stands. The base with a lever to raise or lower the overall stand. The octagonal support resting on a confor...
Category
Antique 1830s Austrian Biedermeier Music Stands
Materials
Birch
Victorian Black Leather Shell Case
Located in Essex, MA
Cylindrical with two handles and a painted coat of arms.
Category
Antique 1850s English Victorian Umbrella Stands
Materials
Brass
Edward F. Caldwell Marble And Bronze Umbrella Stand
By Edward F. Caldwell
Co.
Located in Essex, MA
This rare and fabulous umbrella stand one of very few made likely for one of the gilded age families mansions. Caldwell supplied such architects as Mead Mckim and White, Carrere and ...
Category
Early 20th Century American Neoclassical Revival Umbrella Stands
Materials
Marble, Bronze
Pair of Regency Mahogany Plate Buckets
Located in Essex, MA
Used originally to cart plates to the dining room in country house England. Great beside a fireplace. With bail handles and brass strapping.
Category
Antique 1810s English Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Brass
$6,250 / set
Regency Style Boxwood Canterbury Commemorating Graniteville Mill
Located in Essex, MA
Made by Florian Papp in New York with an attached plaque." Made in 1941 by Florian Papp from a holly tree left standing in front of the Graniteville Mill ...
Category
Antique 1810s American Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Boxwood
Victorian Mahogany Boot Rack
Located in Essex, MA
With brass carrying handle, boot holder and trestle support.
Category
Antique Mid-19th Century English Victorian Hat Racks and Stands
Materials
Brass
Regency Mahogany Trolley
Located in Essex, MA
Most likely by Gillows of Lancaster. Excellent timber. Three shelves each with molded edges and carved volute brackets and panelled ends, raised on flattened ball feet with casters. ...
Category
Antique 1820s English Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Mahogany
$6,800
Charles X Rosewood Canterbury
Located in Essex, MA
Constructed from solid rosewood. With brass carry handle over dividers with spindles , lower shelf, turned legs and casters. This form was designed by Hepplewhite for the Archbishop of Canterbury...
Category
Antique 1830s Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Rosewood
English Aesthetic Oak Bucket
Located in Essex, MA
With brass handle and liner. Hexagonal form with incised carved decoration. Toupie feet.
Category
Antique 1890s English Aesthetic Movement Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Oak
Regency Mahogany Duet Stand
Located in Essex, MA
Double sided with two pairs of brass candle arms, adjustable with circular columnar support on a shaped triangular plinth base.
Category
Antique 1810s English Regency Music Stands
Materials
Mahogany
Regency Style Mahogany Canterbury
Located in Essex, MA
Typical form, slots for magazines or papers over a drawer, turned legs and casters.
Category
Antique 1810s English Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Mahogany
George III Mahogany and Brass Inlaid Cellarette
Located in Essex, MA
Hexagonal hinged lid with brass gallery over a conforming case, the interior fitted for bottles, sides with brass strapping and carry handles, raised on square tapered legs with span...
Category
Antique 1790s English George III Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Mahogany
Vintage Painted Metal Music Stand
Located in Essex, MA
Painted yellow with an adjustable surface decorated and shaped like a piece of sheet music, on a tubular support and tripod support and scroll feet.
Category
20th Century European Music Stands
Materials
Wrought Iron
Pair of George III Painted and Giltwood Pole Screens
Located in Essex, MA
Each with chenille embroidered panel within a reverse glass border, adjustable, raise on a tripod base with lions head carvings. Scroll feet.
Category
Antique Late 18th Century English George III Screens and Room Dividers
Materials
Paint
Regency Mahogany Canterbury
Located in Essex, MA
Typical form with single drawer with lions head handles, circular legs, casters.
Category
Antique 1810s English Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Mahogany
Victorian Cast Iron Umbrella Stand
Located in Essex, MA
Depicting a farmer with a bundle of wheat on his back. Titled "The Reaper". Loose inset drip pan.
Category
Antique 1880s English Victorian Umbrella Stands
Materials
Iron
George III Mahogany Hanging Shelf
Located in Essex, MA
Four shelves over a fret carved gallery, sides with Chinese style open trellis work, scrolled volutes brackets top and bottom.
Category
Antique 1760s English George III Shelves
Materials
Mahogany
American Rococo Revival Rosewood Canterbury
Located in Essex, MA
Unusual form in American furniture and probably by Alexander Roux or Joseph Meeks. Typical slatted file section , leaf tip carved frieze raised on cabri...
Category
Antique 1850s American Rococo Revival Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Rosewood
George III Mahogany Reading Stand
Located in Essex, MA
With rectangular hinged adjustable top over a turned support and candleholder, tripartite cabriole legs and pad feet.
Category
Antique 1760s English George III Music Stands
Materials
Mahogany
William IV Mahogany Duet Music Stand
Located in Essex, MA
With central finial and double lyre ratcheted sheet music holders and a single attached brass candle arm, raised on a turned reeded support, shaped triang...
Category
Antique 1820s English William IV Music Stands
Materials
Mahogany
Regency Rosewood Canterbury
Located in Essex, MA
Typical form with rack section above a drawer, raised on turned carved tapered legs, casters.
Category
Antique Early 19th Century English Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Rosewood
Regency Mahogany Canterbury
Located in Essex, MA
Of unusual size with reeded spindles and two interior compartments, contains a frieze drawer and raised on tapered reeded legs with casters.
Category
Antique Early 19th Century English Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Mahogany
Related Items
Regency Rosewood Duet Music Stand
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A fine Regency Period Rosewood Duet Musicians Stand with Lyre shaped sheet music rest which pivots and also adjusts in height to suit the musicians requirements this superb quality M...
Category
Antique Early 19th Century British Regency Music Stands
Materials
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Gothic Revival Carved Oak Umbrella Stand with Carved Rail and Zinc Liner Tanks
Located in Lisse, NL
Wonderful Gothic eyecatcher to come home to, umbrella or stick stand.
If first impressions count then you cannot go wrong with this Gothic Revival stand in your entrance. Not only i...
Category
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Materials
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$1,441
H 31.2 in W 19.5 in D 9.6 in
Regency Mahogany Antique Boat Shaped Canterbury
Located in Bedfordshire, GB
A good quality English early 19th century regency
Period mahogany boat shaped Canterbury having
Elegant square supports over one frieze drawer
With replacement brass knobs raised on ...
Category
Antique Early 19th Century English Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Mahogany
Antique Victorian Oak Stick or Umbrella Stand
Located in Wormelow, Herefordshire
A handsome antique Victorian English oak stick stand with zinc liner dating to circa 1860.
Beautifully crafted, this 19th century stick or umb...
Category
Antique Mid-19th Century English Victorian Umbrella Stands
Materials
Wood, Oak
Large Mahogany Canterbury Circa 1830
Located in Sherborne, GB
Mahogany Canterbury of good scale, fine turned legs finishing on brass cup casters, making it easy to move around. This large Canterbury has four slatted divisions, so plenty of spac...
Category
Antique Early 19th Century English Regency Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Brass
Carl Auböck Vintage Mid-Century Modern Brass Bookstand, 1950s, Austria
By Werkstätte Carl Auböck
Located in Vienna, AT
A Carl Auböck vintage Mid-Century Modern brass bookstand model no. 3606, which was designed 1950s, Vienna.
The bookstand shows beautiful brass patina ...
Category
Vintage 1950s Austrian Mid-Century Modern Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Brass
$3,579
H 6.89 in W 11.23 in D 10.44 in
English Victorian Rosewood Canterbury
Located in Laguna Beach, CA
English Victorian rose wood canterbury, mid 19th century. With 3 slots for magazines, the front slot with upper center shield design S shaped tops supported by floral carved vertical...
Category
Antique Mid-19th Century English Victorian Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Brass
ANTiQUE 1900 ARTS
CRAFTS SHAPLAND AND PETTER HALL COAT GLOVE UMBRELLA STAND
By Shapland
Petter
Located in West Sussex, Pulborough
Royal House Antiques
Royal House Antiques is delighted to offer for sale this stunning original Arts & Crafts Shapland & Petter Hall stand with hand hammered Copper panels over a Walnut frame with inset sheild mirror
Please note the delivery fee listed is just a guide, it covers within the M25 only for the UK and local Europe only for international, if you would like an accurate quote please send me your postcode and I’ll provide you with the exact price
A very good looking well made and decorative hat glove coat and scarf rack, this one is rare as it has the central mirror and its an earlier than usual example circa 1900
Made by Shapland & Petter, a full blub on their life and works can be found below
In terms of the condition it is straight and solid, the piece sits well in any setting and looks decorative and very English country house, we have cleaned waxed and polished the timber, there is one hook slightly bent, otherwise its in fine order
Dimensions
Height:- 205cm
Width:- 113cm
Depth:- 40cm
Please note all measurements are taken at the widest point, if you would like any additional or specific measurements please ask
Shapland and Petter of Barnstaple
Introduction
This Barnstaple based company manufactured some of the finest pieces of furniture in Arts and Crafts style but very little has been written about the company or the pieces they produced. It a great shame that whilst Shapland and Petter pieces have been illustrated in books and auction catalogues they are invariably attributed to other makers such as Liberty and Co in London or Wylie and Lochhead in Glasgow. With this feature, we intend to inspire a more thorough appreciation of the work of the company; readers are invited to help with the task by sending photographs and information.
Collectors and auction houses are now showing significantly more interest in Shapland and Petter pieces. The company, based in Barnstaple, England produced a very wide range of furniture in several different styles including many pieces in period reproduction and municipal style for town halls and commercial premises alongside their superb Arts and Crafts range
Distinctive features of their superb Arts and Crafts style are the use of heart shaped piercing, geometric shapes with angled arches and the application of repousse copper panels. Decoration with marquetry, metal inlay, mounting of ceramic and enamel cabochons were techniques which they mastered with a combination of state of the art technology and traditional craftsmanship. Most distinctively, the pieces were extremely well made, with care and very best quality materials
The growing interest in Shapland and Petter has raised many questions about the origins of the firm, and the sources of influence on their designs, some of which resemble designs by Ashbee, Ballie Scott, Voysey and Talwin Morris. Links have been assumed with Liberty and Co with the supposition Shapland and Petter worked on commissions for Liberty. There appears to be little evidence to support many of the assumptions which have developed around the company and this article is intended to help to start the discussion and to stimulate research
The History of Shapland and Petter
The Museum of North Devon in Barnstaple have an archive of Shapland and Petter which includes some company records and a small display of furniture and related items. The following text gives history of the company and is reproduced from the display boards in the museum with kind permission of North Devon Museums
For over 100 years the Shapland and Petter factory has stood at the end of Barnstaple Long Bridge. Manufacturers of doors, door sets, and custom wood interiors, NT Shapland and Petter Ltd are still one of the towns largest employers. The company was established by Henry Shapland (b. 1823), a cabinet maker by trade. He embarked on a voyage to America in 1848, where he was inspired by an invention for a wave-moulding machine. He was only allowed to see it if he left the country immediately. Returning home with only rough notes, he reproduced the machine and in 1854 began a cabinet making business in one room at the Raleigh woolen mill in Pilton. Later the firm moved to Bear Street in Barnstaple. Henry Petter was an accountant who entered into partnership with Mr Shapland. The business progressed and in 1864 they bought the Raleigh Factory where Shapland first began his work. Success was rapid, but in 1888 the building burnt down. Immediately work began on a bigger and better factory - their present site by the Long Bridge - which included many modern inventions
The two Henrys died within two years of each other - Petter in 1907 and Shapland in 1909. In 1924 Shapland and Petter merged with the Barnstaple Cabinet Company, producing North Devon's biggest industry. During the First World War Shapland and Petter's skilled craftsmen turned their hands to wooden propellers for the aircraft of the Royal Flying Corps. After the war, public tastes changed, and hand carved furniture was too expensive for many. Shapland and Petter's output now included elegant veneered pieces with smooth Art Deco lines. The company fitted out Pullman carriages and ocean liners and made hand-carved church furniture. The famous England Rugby Captain W. W. Wakefield was appointed Company Director in 1927. Throughout the depression of the late 1920's and early 1930's the company still managed to produce high quality work
Furniture manufacturing continued until the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939. Many workers left to fight, while the factory worked on Air Ministry contracts for ammunition boxes. After the war came radio cabinets and laboratory and contract furniture, until eventually large quantities of doors were being produced for hospitals, hotels, schools, offices and other buildings. Examples of Shapland and Petter's work can be seen all over North Devon. In Barnstaple, the shop front at 109 High Street is a good example, and the interior of the old Lloyd's Bank, now Chamber's Brasserie, was also Shapland's work. Examples of carving by Shapland's men can be seen in two chairs and a reading desk in Barnstaple Parish Church
As cabinet makers, Shapland and Petter employed up to 350 people at a time. There were designers, carvers, cabinet makers, machinists, polishers, and labourers. The company was one of the first to install American labour-saving devices and was keen to adopt the most up-to-date machinery
The fire of 1888 at the Raleigh Cabinet Works was a huge loss for the company. However, it resulted in a new factory which was altogether more modern and better equipped. The new building by the river was arranged into blocks. The production line began with the saw mills and ended with the finishing rooms. There was modern machinery in every department - one of their saws was the first of its kind in Britain. Water sprinklers and electric lights were a necessity - this factory would not burn down
As well as the furniture production, Shapland and Petter imported timber by sea and rail. The new factory 's facilities were exceptional
Shapland and Petter were renowned for excellent design and workmanship. The carvers were highly skilled, serving seven year apprenticeships and attending classes at the Barnstaple School of Art. Ornately carved furniture required up to a hundred tools
The factory produced made to order woodwork for banks, hotels, and shops; mantelpieces, paneling and staircases. They fitted out Pullman railway carriages, the London Guildhall, and Edgar Wallace 's dining room as well as houses like Tapeley Park in North Devon
Much of the work involved intricate leaded glass panels, or inlaid fruitwood designs, like the white bedroom suite shown in the exhibition here. This type of work is typical of Art Nouveau 1895 to 1910, inspired by the fluid shapes of plants and flowers
Many pieces were made from standard designs. There were hundreds to choose from, and a selection could be seen in local and London showrooms and in catalogues. Although mass-produced, this furniture was well-made by skilled technicians and modern machinery
Arts and Crafts designs of Shapland and Petter
The development of the Arts and Crafts Movement in the South West of England has not been written up in any detail though we do know of the Art Potters of Barnstaple from the excellent book of this name by Audrey Edgeler. Less is known of the Barnstaple Guild of Metal Workers. We know of the Bath Cabinet Makers and the Newlyn School of Industrial Art in Cornwall but very little has been written about the furniture makers of Barnstaple in Devon
The establishment of a large cabinet making firm in Barnstaple is not remarkable in itself; there were several cabinet makers in the area. What is interesting is that this particular Barnstaple firm should become a leading maker of Arts and Crafts furniture, copying the styles of the leading Architect designers and creating their own unique style
Critics may point out that as their work was commercially driven and reliant upon machines it therefore does not really qualify as Arts and Crafts. Whilst the company was highly innovative in machine technology, they also employed many craftsmen who worked with their hands in woodcarving, marquetry work, design and application of decorative copperwork and other artistic embellishment in the true Arts and Crafts tradition. Anyone who has experience of Shapland and Petter workmanship knows the level of craftsmanship invested in each piece
Sources of inspiration
There appears to be no evidence to link any known architect, artist or designer to the Shapland and Petter company. Their designs appear to have been created solely by their own internal design staff none of whom appear to have published or registered their work in any other context
C. R. Ashbee who established the Guild of Handicrafts visited Barnstaple in 1893 and provided a twelve week course on the design and decoration of furniture. It is presumed that this visit was hosted by Shapland and Petter, and that their own staff and those from other local furniture makers attended the course. Ashbee appears to have been unimpressed by the commercial attitudes he encountered and apparently disappointed at the lack of interest in his (high minded) lectures. What is interesting however is the similarity between some of his designs and those used by Shapland and Petter, particularly in respect to inlaid floral design. Perhaps he left a lasting influence which has not yet been verified
There has been some speculation on the influence of Scottish designers, particularly because of the use of Glasgow rose designs which are typical of the Glasgow School, and particularly of Talwin Morris. There are also several designs which use similar motifs to those used by Baillie Scott, the use of two doves in flight for example. More research is needed to trace possible links here. One thing that is clear is that there was a great deal of copying and selling designs in the furniture industry at the time and a nineteenth century survey on the furniture trade recorded that '' Barnstaple pays the best prices for designs ..''
Collaboration with other companies
There is evidence that Shapland and Petter organised a wide network of companies to retail their products and hence many pieces have the labels of retail furnishers added. Little is known of their marketing in Europe and America but it may be that many Arts and Crafts pieces were sold abroad. Shapland and Petter had excellent access to rail and shipping lines for importing timber and presumably for exporting their finished products
The extent of their collaboration with other companies is yet to be ascertained but there is evidence that their suppliers included the Della Robbia Pottery, Pilkingtons Tile...
Category
Antique Early 1900s English Arts and Crafts Coat Racks and Stands
Materials
Copper
$4,058
H 80.71 in W 44.49 in D 15.75 in
Monumental Victorian Renaissance Revival Walnut Granite Hall Tree Umbrella Stand
Located in Dayton, OH
Massive Victorian Era Renaissance Revival hall tree and umbrella stand, circa 1870s. Made from walnut with a large glass plate pier mirr...
Category
Antique 1870s Renaissance Revival Hat Racks and Stands
Materials
Mirror, Walnut
$8,500
H 93 in W 55 in D 14 in
19th Century Bookstand
Located in High Point, NC
19th century bookstand from England made from rosewood. The handles are hand-turned along with the spindles, which terminate on the ends with lovely lyre inspired shaped pieces. The ...
Category
Antique Mid-19th Century English Victorian Magazine Racks and Stands
Materials
Rosewood
19th Century English Oak Umbrella Stand
Located in High Point, NC
19th century oak umbrella or cane stand from England. The back has lovely serpentine and scalloped details, which give it a lovely shape and will lend itself to a beautiful silhouet...
Category
Antique 19th Century English Victorian Umbrella Stands
Materials
Oak
Antique Victorian Gothic Mirrored Walnut Hall Tree With Umbrella Stand c1890
Located in Big Flats, NY
Antique Victorian Gothic Mirrored Walnut Hall Tree With Umbrella Stand c1890
Measures - 88 1/2" x 34" x 13 1/2"
This exquisite Victorian Gothic hall tree, crafted around 1890, showca...
Category
Antique Late 19th Century Hat Racks and Stands
Materials
Walnut
$1,160 Sale Price
20% Off
H 88.5 in W 34 in D 13.5 in







