Richard Gardner Antiques
 
 
  Previous Page
  Home
  Email Us
   
 
 
  Enlargement:
Pair of Globes By S.
 
  Enlargement:
Pair of Globes By S.
   
  Click on images to zoom in further
   
  Pair of Globes By S. S. Edkins

Circa 1845
H: 46½ in / 118 cm
Stock Number: ta27win06
£68,500

A pair of mid 19th Century terrestrial and celestial 18 inch globes by S. S. Edkins, son-in-law and successor to the late T. M. Bardin, Salisbury Square, London, geographic drawings by Arrowsmith and labelled ‘Sir Joseph Banks K.B- President of The Royal Society’, the stands in rosewood with turned columns and carved and scrolled cabriole legs.

These globes were recently acquired in Australia and the species of rosewood used in the stands would suggest that globes were commissioned in London and sent out to Australia where the stands were then completed.

William Bardin
(1740 - 1803)
William Bardin became a freeman of the Leathersellers' Company in 1775 at the age of 35 and transferred one year later to the Girdlers' Company. For unknown reasons Bardin moved into globe making c. 1780, in association with Gabriel Wright . The first globes published by Wright and Bardin of 9 and 12 in. diameter, are dated 1January 1782 . The collaboration between the two seems to have ended by 1794/5 when the Bardin firm moved from Hind Court to 16 Salisbury Square, on the opposite side of Fleet Street. The business was continued there by Bardin and his son, Thomas Marriott Bardin (1768-1819), who in 1783 had been apprenticed to his father. After becoming a freeman in 1790, Thomas Marriott joined his father's firm in the partnership of W & T. M. Bardin. Around 1798, the globe production of the Bardin firm was extended to include a pair of 18 in. globes. These new British globes were made in collaboration with the firm of W& S. Jones . A few years later, another pair of 12 in. globes appeared, now carrying the name of T. M. Bardin only, since the elder Bardin had died in 1798. The globe production of Thomas Marriott Bardin was taken over by Elizabeth Marriott Bardin (1799-1851), his daughter, in 1820, a year after her father's death. After her marriage in 1832 to the silversmith and member of the Cutlers' Company, Samuel Sabine Edkins, the globes were sold with the label of `S. S. Edkins, son-in-law to T M. Bardin'. A son of Edkins' (from an earlier marriage) joined the firm in 1848, at which point its name was changed to `S. S. Edkins & Son'. A few years after S. S. Edkins's death in 1853, the firm was closed.