All eyes were drawn to the dazzling array of quilts offered at  Skinner’s Americana sale here February 20, where a Civil War  appliquéd example was top lot when it sold for $82,250, twice the  high estimate.   The quilt was made in 1864 by Margaret Hazzard of Bainbridge  Township in Berrien County, Mich., for her husband Philetus to  take with him when he went to fight the war. The quilt was  executed in warm beige and brown tones with complementary greens,  black and red, comprising 20 blocks, each depicting a building  with meaning for Hazzard, such as his home, his school and other  buildings in the towns where he lived. Hazzard died within months  of joining the army, and the quilt was subsequently returned to  his widow. The quilt was deaccessioned from the Pennsylvania  Quilt and Textile Museum in Lititz, Penn. A vibrant Baltimore  album heart-in-hand quilt that was also deaccessioned from the  museum went within estimate for $22,325.   A mere butter plate turned out to be hardly that when it  generated great interest during the preview and lively bidding  during the sale where it sold for $38,775 to a very determined  Jonathan Trace who outlasted significant room and telephone  competition. The plate was made in Boston in about 1730 by Samuel  Edwards and was one of a pair described in the 1757 inventory of  the estate of Boston merchant Edward Jackson, whose name is  engraved on the back. The mate is in the collection of the Museum  of Fine Arts, Boston. The plate was consigned by a descendant.   A jazzy 1805 federal cherry tall case clock ablaze with patera  inlay made by Joseph Mulliken of Concord, Mass., realized $32,900  from a phone bidder.   A federal mahogany sideboard with a fine serpentine top, probably  made in New York in about 1795, brought $29,375, while a set of  six federal mahogany inlaid shield back chairs from the same New  Hampshire house went to Craig Prickett for $27,025. Mr Prickett  also took a late addition to the sale, a New York Chippendale  mahogany side chair with elegant carving and a shaped crest above  a vasiform splat. Stirring lively interest, the chair made  $36,425.   A handsome pair of engraved Philadelphia brass and iron urn-top  andirons attracted a lot of interest, including that of Albert  Sack’s clients, but the pair sold on the phone for $28,200,  nearly triple the low estimate.   An exceptionally charming circa 1830 oil on panel portrait of  Elizabeth Ware Thompson that was attributed to her uncle Thomas  Ware sold for $30,550. The portrait of the 4-year-old, who was  wearing a yellow dress, was consigned by her  great-great-grandchild.   A Massachusetts Queen Anne walnut roundabout chair with two  vasiform splats and nicely shaped arms had been refinished but  still stirred interest and sold for $23,500 against the estimated  $3/5,000. A phone bidder took a painted pine checkerboard with  breadboard ends with the inscriptions “Play Fair” and “Fair Play”  for $7,638 against the estimated $800-$1,200. Material from the Nantucket estate of Grace Swid Grossmanthat comprised 178 lots in the sale stirred a lot of interest.Bernard and Grace Grossman collected from the 1930s through the1960s, and the objects they loved were fine indeed, but many hadbeen refinished. One might have expected prices to falter but thatwas hardly the case. Bidders were enthusiastic and prices werestrong.   Martha Hamilton of Skinner’s Americana department attributed that  strength to the “rare and wonderful forms of pieces that were  absolutely right.” She added, “People were able to look past any  lack of surface.” She suggested that the Grossmans, who began  collecting in the 1930s when Wallace Nutting encouraged  collectors to clean up those grungy old surfaces, probably felt  his influence.   A Queen Anne maple tea table with a perky shaped and scalloped  skirt thought to be of Massachusetts origin had once been painted  and was refinished. Nevertheless, it was a terrific piece and  sold for $21,150 against the estimated $3/5,000.   A mid-Eighteenth Century tiger maple desk-on-frame had also been  refinished, but its rare form drove its final price to $18,800.   Lots of bidders coveted a particularly fine but shiny New England  Windsor fanback armchair with a serpentine crest, and a flurry of  bidding drove it to $29,375 from an absentee buyer. A set of four  Rhode Island bow back Windsor armchairs with scratch-beaded bowed  crest rails sold for $11,163.   Bidding on a beautifully formed Queen Anne tiger maple and maple  porringer-top tap table opened at $6,500 and only ended at  $23,500. The late Eighteenth Century piece came from southeastern  New England.   Other gems from the Grossman estate included a federal giltwood  mirror by Hosea Dugliss of New York with an eglomise tablet with  an image of musical instruments that sold by left bid for  $14,100. A New England Federal tiger maple chamberstand with an  estimate of $4/600 realized a very healthy $3,525.   A handsome Queen Anne tiger maple dressing table thought to be a  Massachusetts piece with extensive cockbeading had a few  imperfections and was refinished and sold midestimate for  $19,975.   An oil on canvas view of boat houses and sailboats by George  Herbert McCord estimated at $3/5,000 was of much greater interest  than its estimate and drew $18,800, as did a lot of four  beautiful George III rococo sterling candlesticks by Londoner  Jonathan Gould in 1752.   A nest of nine round Nantucket baskets made in the early 1970s  fetched $11,750 on the phone, while an early Twentieth Century  Gebelein colonial revival sterling flatware service drew $10,575  against its estimated $1/1,500. Hamilton said the silver was a  particularly fine example.   Mrs Grossman’s island car, a 1999 Mercedes CLK 320 with an  odometer reading of 3,341, brought a quite strong $28,200. Skinner’s country Americana sale in Bolton on February 19 wasreplete with good crusty offerings. The star of the day was theimposing (79 inches) and colorfully painted Indian tobacconisttrade figure of a woman that blew past its estimates to aresounding $28,200. A carved and painted pine and tin Indianweathervane of a kneeling warrior was also a star when it sold for$18,800. The vane came from Maine, was said to have topped theOrder of Red Men meeting hall and had also been owned by BernardBarenholtz. Another weathervane, a gilt cast-iron and sheet ironexample of a proud rooster was made at the Rochester Iron Works inRochester, N.H., and it fetched $8,225.   A New England William and Mary gate leg table, circa 1710-1720,  in maple, sycamore and pine drew interest and ended at $17,625.   A lively Nineteenth Century Pennsylvania poplar step back  cupboard had a lot going on: molded muntons, concentric roundels,  reeded paneling, cock-beading and freehand painted designs of  hearts and scalloping, and it sold for $16,450. A handsome New  England Windsor bench with three panels along the crest and  bamboo turned spindles in old yellow paint with painted tulip  designs sold for $4,994.   What collectors prized as the “Holy Grail” of cast-iron fry pans,  a cast-iron frying pan wall clock advertising the Griswold Mfg  Co., of Erie, Penn., confounded observers when it sold for  $4,406. A flurry of Internet interest alerted Skinner staff to  the importance of the pan that was estimated at $4/600 and that  they might otherwise have placed in a discovery sale.   All prices quoted reflect the premium of 171/2 percent of the  first $80,000 of the purchase price and ten percent thereafter.          
 
    



 
						