News & Insights

Music, Science & Mysticism Lead Book Sale

10th April 2024.

An interesting archive of letters and ephemera relating to the composer and bandmaster Charles Coote (1809-1880), personal pianist to William Cavendish, the 6th Duke of Devonshire, sold for £4,500 in the Books, Maps & Manuscripts Sale at Tennants Auctioneers on 10th April (all figures exclude buyer’s premium).

Coote was associated with Chatsworth for over 30 years, leading the Duke’s private orchestra and composing for the household. Throughout his career he wrote or arranged almost 200 pieces of music, including his ‘Chatsworth Quadrilles’ in 1843 in celebration of a visit to the great house by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. On numerous occasions Coote was ‘loaned’ to Charles Dickens, to write music and lead the band for his various stage productions around the country, including a comedy staged at the Duke’s London home which was performed in front of the Queen.

Also selling well at £3,800 was a fascinating album of eighty-one photographs taken on the legendary Challenger Expedition of 1872-1876, which was a landmark voyage that established the foundations of oceanography. A joint venture between the Royal Society of London and the British Admiralty, a converted Royal Navy vessel set out from Sheerness to circumnavigate the globe, exploring the physical, chemical, and biological make-up of the deep sea and charting oceanic eco-systems. Comprising 250 sailors and six civilian scientists, led by Charles Wyville Thomson, the team covered nearly 69,000 nautical miles in three and a half years, dredging, trawling, and sounding at hundreds of locations around the world, taking samples and recording all their findings for the scientific record. The album was monogrammed 'JB', suggesting possible ownership to John Young Buchanan, chemist to the expedition.

Contrasting with such a landmark of mainstream scientific enquiry was a collection of books from the Fred Gettings Library. Gettings was an author, who penned numerous books on the occult and across a vast range of arcane topics. Twenty lots from his private collection were on offer in the sale, with subjects including magic, prophecy, Hermetics, the writings of Nostradamus and the occult, which sold for a total hammer price of £7,180. Most notably, a group lot of books which included Sir Ernest Bennett’s Apparitions and Haunted Houses, A Survey of Evidence sold for £2,200, and a group of Tarot Cards and related literature sold for £1,200.  

Further notable lots included a copy of Christopher Saxton’s Map of Yorkshire of 1577, the earliest printed map of the county (sold for £2,100), two books relating to Blue Coat School in Kendal (sold for £420), twenty-four proof copies of John Martin's illustrations for Paradise Lost (sold for £1,300), and an outstanding collection of 19th century photographs relating to Windsor and Eton College, and Trinity College, Cambridge, as well as several European locations (sold for £700).

Achieving prices well above estimate, too, were a Description of The Barossa Range and its Neighbourhood, in South Australia by ‘Agricola’ and illustrated by George French Angas (sold for £3,500), and a copy of Angas’ The Kafir’s Illustrated, which depicted numerous tribes in Southern Africa (sold for £2,800).

The sale achieved a total hammer price of £62,060, with a 94% sold rate for the 116 lots.

 

View Sale Results

< Back to News