George III Period Mahogany Library Secretaire Desk By Gillows of Lancaster

£12,500.00

Circa 1790

A superb George III period free-standing Mahogany Secretaire Library Desk or Centre Cabinet by Gillows of Lancaster, panelled all round with a secretaire drawer containing “alphabet inlaid” lidded compartments, secret drawers and a removable, retractable writing slope above a kneehole cupboard flanked by 3 graduated drawers to each side and the whole raised on a plinth base.

H: 38” 97cms. W:52”, 132 cms, D:26”, 66 cms

Gillows of Lancaster 

No: 10697 

A superb George III period free standing Mahogany Secretaire Library Centre Cabinet by Gillows of Lancaster,  panelled all round with a secretaire drawer containing “alphabet inlaid” lidded compartments and a removable writing slope above a kneehole cupboardflanked by 3 graduated drawers to each side and the whole raised on a plinth base.

Circa 1790 

Price: £12,500.00

H: 39” 99cms. W:52”, 132 cms, D:26”, 66 cms

Attribution: See Susan Stuart, “Gillows of Lancaster and London 1730 to 1840” Vol. I, Plates 48, 66, 67,291, 293, 295, 296, 298, and 434. Vol. II Plates GG28,29&30, pp377,  GG31 pp378,  GG42 pp384, for this model of desk and variations.

See also “Gillow Furniture Designs, 1760 – 1800” by Lyndsay Boynton, Plate 24.

Attribution: We know this is by Gillows of Lancaster even though there is no stamp on it or signature. What does it have – well it has the same knobs as the library secretaire Table by Gillows which we bought some years ago from Mere Hall. The timbers are of exceptional quality with only the richest Mahogany used throughout. The secretaire opens to show letter inlaid oval panel hinged compartments which was a speciality of Gillows and it has the secret boxes with the original green material pulls hidden behind these compartments and the hinged secretaire drawer.

These are all hallmarks of a family of desks made by Gillows in the last quarter of the 18th. century and written up in detail by Susan Stuart in her wonderful 2 volume set on Gillows.

There are numerous similar examples illustrated in “Gillows of Lancaster and London 1730-1840”. She states that this model of desk was made for several patrons including William Egerton at Tatton Park, Sir William Stanley of Hooton and his kinsman, Mr Thomas Stanley, Thomas Gibbons of Wolverhampton and the Earl of Shrewsbury. It appears an example may also have been made for Shavington Hall in Shropshire.

In common with the Satinwood Library Table made in 1790 by John Savage of Gillows for the London Gillows shop, this example is a completely free standing “library table to stand in the middle of a room” and all the above have the double depth secretaire drawer with the top sham drawers hinged to fold forward and, as each was a commissioned piece, there are variations according to the clients’ requirements. Some have an easel top, others have a double rising top and others have a fixed top.

This desk has an interesting variation on the theme of a sliding tray and rising top with a sliding, lift-out writing/reading slope fitted with a pen drawer and gilt tooled leather lined writing slope. The whole stands on casters and the drawers are fitted with brass drawer knobs.

The designs for Secretaire Library Cabinets in the Gillows Archives tell us a lot and in the accompanying pages we read about “Lettering the covers in the writing drawer”. Numerous Cabinets, “Buro” Writing Tables, Desks and Bookcases from the 1780s and 1790s appear in these ledgers and every single one of the illustrated examples with a secretaire drawer includes the words about the alphabetically inlaid covers so this does give credence to this device being a hallmark for Gillows of Lancaster.

Strong and important looking library tables of this pattern with sliding partitions, lettered compartments and secret (or private as Gillows called them) drawers were among the most expensive pieces made by them in the late 18th. century.

Lit: See Susan Stuart, “Gillows of Lancaster and London 1730 to 1840” Vol. I, Plates 48, 66, 67,291, 293, 295, 296, 298, and 434. Vol. II Plates GG28,29&30, pp377, GG31 pp378, GG42 pp384, for this model of desk and variations.
See also “Gillow Furniture Designs, 1760 – 1800” by Lyndsay Boynton, Plate 24.

Delivery in the UK mainland is included in the marked price.

Pin It on Pinterest