There is (or used to
be) a saying in the north of England that someone who had their wits about
them - typically an older person who might be expected to be failing
mentally - had "all their chairs at home". I've always
liked the homeliness of this expression, suggesting as it does the possession
of all one's mental furniture as a metaphor for continuing sanity. For
the first time in a while, I've got two rather special chairs of my own at home,
and trust the pleasure of possessing them will keep dementia at bay for a few
more years. I'd like to tell you their story.
It concerns two men.
The first is the Rt Hon Sir Philip Sassoon Bt GBE CMG: born in his mother's mansion (she was a Rothschild) on the Avenue de
Marigny, Paris in 1888. He was a gay, Jewish baronet, millionaire,
MP, Government minister, mover, shaker, top-drawer socialite, and cousin of the WW1 poet,
Siegfried. The other is Reuben Ridley: born to working-class parents in
Clarissa Street, Haggerston, east London in 1902. He was a lorry driver, and my
maternal grandfather. The two men never met and had, on the face of it, nothing in common. Except some chairs.
Sir Philip Sassoon |
Trent Park House today |
Reuben Ridley |
Sometime later, I was visited at home by a colleague from the government department in which I then worked. He was an antiques buff, and asked about the chairs which were dotted around the house and which I had long since stopped noticing. I told him the story. Did he think they were very old? "Late Regency", he said, "No later than 1830." I was suitably impressed. Apart from a George III penny of 1806, they were the oldest things I owned, and I found a new respect for them. But they were not much use except as bedroom chairs, and in a poorish condition. I pretty much soon forgot about them again, and for 20 years until a few months ago they were stored in our vicarage attic.
I thought of them
again when, in 2016, we bought the little house on the Essex coast which is our
retreat and to which we plan to retire. I got them down from the attic.
They were predictably filthy, and in an even worse condition than I'd
remembered. But they were part of my family history and I wanted to
rehabilitate them. Our neighbour recommended a local furniture restorer who
came round to collect them. We agreed that, given their condition, he
would cannibalise one of them with the aim of restoring the other two. He
brought them back this week, and here they are:
To say that I am delighted with them doesn't cover it. I am absolutely cock-a-hoop, over-the-moon - "made up" (as they say in Liverpool). They are elegantly simple in form yet finely turned, carved and ornamented; and perhaps now almost as good as they were when they were hand-made the best part of 200 years ago. If I am right to assume from their age, quality and such provenance as I have that they did indeed grace the grand, glittering household which Sassoon created in the 1920s, who knows who may have sat on them before me? WSC, GBS, royalty?
Yet I cannot look at them or sit on them without thinking of my Cockney grandparents and their terraced house in Leyton, one of the chairs next to the single bed in which my brother and I would lie awake, top to tail, listening to the eerie clangs and hoots from the adjacent Temple Mills marshalling yard.
Wouldn't it be wonderful if they were still being sat on in another 200 years? Against that possibility, I am setting down what I know about them - while I still have all my chairs at home.
To say that I am delighted with them doesn't cover it. I am absolutely cock-a-hoop, over-the-moon - "made up" (as they say in Liverpool). They are elegantly simple in form yet finely turned, carved and ornamented; and perhaps now almost as good as they were when they were hand-made the best part of 200 years ago. If I am right to assume from their age, quality and such provenance as I have that they did indeed grace the grand, glittering household which Sassoon created in the 1920s, who knows who may have sat on them before me? WSC, GBS, royalty?
Yet I cannot look at them or sit on them without thinking of my Cockney grandparents and their terraced house in Leyton, one of the chairs next to the single bed in which my brother and I would lie awake, top to tail, listening to the eerie clangs and hoots from the adjacent Temple Mills marshalling yard.
Wouldn't it be wonderful if they were still being sat on in another 200 years? Against that possibility, I am setting down what I know about them - while I still have all my chairs at home.
I would like to thank
Jeremy Soames of J.Soames Upholstery of Brightlingsea, Essex for his careful
and sensitive work on restoring the chairs, and to commend it to others.
The contemporary picture of Trent Park House is by JulesFoto. The estate became part of the University of Middlesex in the 1990s, and was sold to the Berkeley Housing Group in 2015. As far as I can determine it is not currently in use, though the park is excellent for dog-exercising and picnics.