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C. S. Windover & Co.
London and Paris
Circa 1888
Type:
The Beaufort phaeton is listed in the Windover catalogue as the No.
59 Grand Audley de Chasse, but it was more likely called a shooting
phaeton in Britain. This example has louvers in the sides of the
rear boot, but it has no slatted gates to make it usable for carrying
gun dogs, nor clips for guns. It might be driven with a single horse
of 15.2 to 16 hands or with a pair. It is intended for use in the country.
Provenance:
It stood for many years in the coach-house of the White Hall, Winestead,
in East Yorkshire, and was used very little for about thirty years.
It was sold by auction after the death of the owner in 1959, and Mr.
Seabrook bought it in 1966. At that time the phaeton still had the original
paintwork of red undercarriage and black body with red louvers, It had
a crest on the front panels which may have been that of a member of
the Talbot family, one of whom, Major Talbot Clifford Constable, lived
nearby in the 1870s It has been completely restored in recent years.
Builder:
Charles Sanford Windover was one of a family of carriage makers in Huntingdon
who started his own business at 32 Long Acre, London, about 1870. He
was elected a member of the Worshipful Company of Carriage Makers in
1875. Windover was one of the seven English exhibitors of carriages
at the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia in 1876. Carriages of the
smaller kinds were his specialty, and he patented the design of the
ralli car but was not able to prevent its being copied by other firms.
The firm became C.S. Windover & Co., Ltd. in 1895 and continued
in business until about 1930.
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