1805 antique SIR RICH ARKWRIGHT mansion CROMFORD handcolor ENGRAVING derbyshire
From the George Meade Easby estate auction...
This listing is for the original Laurie & Whittle color engraving. Comes with original wood frame, glass and shingle back. Measures approx: 18.75" x 13.75".
Beautiful color print with vibrant colors. A tear on top mid/right mostly border, and some residual light soiling on print behind glass.
Shipping can be less if you don't want the frame and shingle back.
Here's great input from an experienceder: This engraving should be dated to 1805 (publishing date) not 1790. 1790 was the nominal date of Willersley's construction, although the house was not finally occupied until 1793 on account of a serious fire that occurred in 1791 while it was being fitted out.
Regards - Nic Barfield
Thank you, Nic!
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Research from Wikipedia:
George Gordon Meade Easby (1918 - December 11, 2005) was the great-grandson of U.S. Civil War General George Gordon Meade of the Union Army and a descendant of seven signers of the U.S. Declaration of Independence. Easby's mother was a descendant of Nicholas Waln, who came to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1682, the same year as William Penn, aboard the ship Lamb and was later given the area now known as Frankford.[1]
Easby was a multi-talented person, from being a Hollywood actor/producer to a cartoonist after World War II, and from serving the government as a U.S. State Department employee for twenty-five years to being a radio talk host. He was also a major art/antique collector, who inherited more than 100,000 antiques and personal items, many of which had been in his family for centuries. His collection includes items belonging to Gen. George Meade, a chair and other high valued items belonging to Napoleon Bonaparte as well as jewelry belonging to Josephine de Beauharnais. Many pieces from his collection have been loaned to the White House and U.S. State Department for its diplomatic reception rooms. Some of his pieces are also housed at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.[2] George Easby lived nearly all of his life at his family's Baleroy Mansion in the Chestnut Hill section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is said to be one of the most actively haunted houses in the United States.[3] His father, May Stevenson Easby, and his mother, Henrietta Large Easby, moved into Baleroy Mansion in the late 1920s when Easby was only about 11 years old. He also had a younger brother at the time named May Stevenson Easby Jr. who died mysteriously at the approximate age of 10.[2][4] Easby was a graduate of Chestnut Hill Academy and studied illustration for five years at the Philadelphia College of Art. Easby has been known to many as an extremely kind and generous person. He died on December 11, 2005, at Keystone Hospice in Wyndmoor, PA, at the age of 87, leaving no siblings or children. He was buried at Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia.[1]