A personalised gift given by a member of the British Royal family to a distinguished member of the British Army 138 years ago went under the hammer for the first time at Cheffins on Thursday 12th December.
The Victorian silver spirit flask was a gift by Albert, Prince of Wales, the eldest son and second child of Queen Victoria, to Lieutenant Arthur Lyttleton Annesley (1837-1926).
At the time, Albert Edward had held the title of Prince of Wales longer than any of his predecessors and, when Queen Victoria died, he assumed the throne as King Edward VII.
Made by Thomas Johnson I in 1875, the flask bears the Prince of Wales’s Coat of Arms between his initials, ‘A’ and ‘E’, and a facsimile engraved message on the back which is dated Sandringham, 1881.
Lieutenant Arthur Lyttleton Annesley had an illustrious career in the British Army and become Commander-in-Chief of Scotland in 1888. He took part in the Siege of Sebastopol in the winter of 1854 and the battle of Chernaya in August 1855 during the Crimean War.
In 1896, he became Colonel of the 12th (Prince of Wales’s Royal) Lancers, transferring in 1902 to become Colonel of the 11th Hussars.
Steven Collins, head of jewellery, silver and watches at Cheffins Fine Art said: “The flask itself is not in amazing condition so I have given the piece a modest estimate of £300-£500, but frankly the condition is far less important than the provenance in this case.”
The flask sold for £850.