Lot #280 - An Important Live Steam Model of The 'Charlotte Dundas' Circa 1870s
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Auction House:Leonard Joel
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Sale Name:Classic Furniture, Objects & Collectables Auction
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Sale Date:01 Jun 2014 ~ 12noon
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Lot #:280
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Lot Description:An Important Live Steam Model of The 'Charlotte Dundas' Circa 1870s
Approximately 1:24 Scale Model, of The Paddlewheel Steamboat, Constructed, According To Family History, from Timbers Taken From The Actual Charlotte Dundas Which Was Scrapped In 1861, centrally Mounted copper Boiler, Horizontal Engine with Piston Driving A Paddlewheel Mounted To The Stern of The Boat, Two Steerable rudders controlled Via A Wheel To The Foredeck, White Lettering To Hull 'N.M. 1817. -
Notes:Engine Untested, some Restoration To Hull And Guard Rail, with Timber Stand Bearing 'On Her Majesty'S Service... Department of Science And Art, London, S.W.' Paper Label Inscribed In Pencil 'Charlotte Dundas No 1817'; two Lithographic prints showing Lateral Sections of The original 1788 version Of symington's Steamboat And The 1801 Version, of Which This Model Is A Representation; And An Etching of William Symington 'The Inventor of Steam Navigation', All Three In frames Made From Hard Wood Believed To Have Been Taken From The actual Charlotte Dundas; and A Large Archive Of letters And Documents Relating To The History of The Model Including:'International Exhibition, Glasgow, 1888' headed receipt listing the model and prints of the ship drawings. a letter to W.M. Rankine, great grandson of William Symington, from the Department of Science and Art, South Kensington Museum, dated 2nd April 1889, regarding collection of the model from the museum relating to it being exhibited at the Paris Exhibition. a letter from the Deutsches Museum, Munich, to W.H. Rankine dated 23 March, 1906 asking for assistance to 'prepare a model'... 'of this historical and extraordinarily important model'. a photocopy of 'Biography of William Symington', published by A. Johnston, Bookseller, Falkirk, 1862 including three prints of a steam carriage and two versions of Symington's first steam boats W.H. Symington's copy of 'The Nature, Properties, and Applications of Steam' by John Scott Russell, Adam and Charles Black, Northbridge, Edinburgh, 1861, green cloth boards three ambrotypes, believed to be of William Symington's ancestors, cased Exhibited: lnternational Exhibition, Glasgow, 1888. Paris Exhibition, 1889 On loan to South Kensington Museum, London,1889-1903. Immigration Museum, Melbourne 2003 Other Notes: Family history suggests that this model was made by John Rankine and W.H. Rankine, William Symington's grandson and great grandson. However, based on further research, copies of documents obtained from the Science Museum, London refer to a model that was built 'around 1873...under the supervision of James Hamilton, partner in Barclay, Curle & Co.' shipbuilders on the Clyde. This is possibly the same model. William Symington (1764-1831) was a Scottish engineer and inventor who designed the first practical steam boat, the Charlotte Dundas. In 1787, aged only 23, he developed and patented an improved atmospheric engine based on the designs of James Watt and Thomas Newcomen. Large versions of his engines were used with great success in mining. For several years he conducted trials using his engines in land carri
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Estimate:A$10,000 - 15,000
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Realised Price:
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Category:Toys & Models
This Sale has been held and this item is no longer available. Details are provided for information purposes only.