Date: Fri 11-Sep-1998
Date: Fri 11-Sep-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: SHIRLE
Quick Words:
Klinger
Full Text:
Hidden Paul Revere Creamer Found At Klinger
w/3 cuts
By Rita Easton
HYANNIS, MASS. -- The Four Points Sheraton Hotel was the site of an August 5
antique collectors auction held by Klinger & Co, following two previews. Three
hundred thirty-six items were offered for a gross of $113,000.
The most interesting lot was also the piece bringing the highest bid of the
day at $16,000. Consigned by a couple living in the Florida Keys, a
3Ãinch-high Paul Revere (1735-1818), Eighteenth Century cream pitcher,
weighing in at four troy ounces of sterling silver, was discovered in the
bottom of an old sewing machine. The lot was purchased by a dealer/collector.
A 137-troy-ounce Whiting sterling silver tea set realized $2,300; a 51 by 147
inch "Tree of Life" Kazak rug, dated 1894, garnered $6,250; a Civil War set of
surgical instruments reached $1,700; a small Smith & Wesson gun case sold at
$1,300; and a round tavern table, with several coats of worn old paint showing
through, the round top set on a square apron, went out at $2,200.
A mahogany slant lid desk with three drawers below, the lid opening to an
attractively fitted interior, with some restoration, reached $1,000; an
unsigned oil on canvas depicting sheep in a meadow fetched $2,100; a
well-framed new Hampshire landscape oil on panel by Benjamin Chapney,
depicting water, sky, and a treed landscape, brought $700; a four drawer
bowfront chest in mahogany, with some restoration, sold at $1,400; while a
painted step-back cabinet with open shelves above a drawer and two cabinet
doors, thought to be a Peter Hunt piece, was passed.
Twelve matching oyster plates in fine condition reached $1,350; a set of game
plates comprising a serving plate and 11 plates was purchased at $1,100; and a
fish set, which included a serving plate and 11 other plates, also brought
$1,100.
Toy collectors were in attendance, snapping up a Hercules coal truck with
chute at $1,400, and a fine replica of an early touring car with a hood that
opened to reveal the engine at $850.
"Prices were strong," said Klinger, "and we were especially busy on the phones
with exceedingly strong absentee bids in addition. It was a very business-like
crowd. They knew what they wanted, and if it was high quality, it exceeded
estimates."
Prices quoted above do not reflect a required 10 percent buyer's premium.
