Contact Seller
Webberley Antiques
Tel01424 838557Please quote Antiques Atlas.
A mid 19th Century bird's eye maple table
1890 Desk
Pretty Sheraton Revival Rosewood Davenport
Fine 19thC Kneehole Partners Desk
Arts and Crafts Pitch Pine Writing Table
19th C Chinese Chippendale Pagoda Writing Table
William Fry & Co Aesthetic Movement Desk Irish
Oak Partners Kneehole Desk
Flame Mahogany Chippendale Style Writing Desk
Maple Writing Desk
Gillows of Lancaster Regency Writing Table
Small Oak Writing Desk c.1890
Non UK callers :
+44 1424 838557
Exemplary George I Mulberry Bureau Bookcase c.1720

An extremely rare piece of early 18th century English furniture made in mulberry wood and with a fitted upper case retaining its original pigeon hole divisions and its full set of graduated oak lined drawers.
The well fitted interior of the bureau with mulberry faced drawers and original well with two secret oak drawers hidden within the well’s inner framework.
The upper doors with three bookmatched panels of mulberry on each, set within a beautiful and fine featherbanded border. The front of the bureau fall with four bookmatched panels again set within a fine featherbanded border. And the front of each principal drawer beneath the fall with the same mulberry bookmatched panelling within featherbanded borders.
The small drawers within the bureau have incredibly slender and fine oak linings with tiny dovetails. One drawer has a replacement lining but all others are original as are all of the oak linings to the drawers in the upper case and the to the principal drawers. Original backboards, original bun feet with some wear and old worm holes but long since dead. Both locks original and with the same working key.
Mulberry is a very rare timber. It is not taken from a Mulberry bush or tree, it is a thickly cut veneer (usually field maple or sycamore) stained and then washed in an acid which has had copper and other metals dissolved in it. This creates beautiful highlights and contrasts in the wood to make it resemble tortoiseshell.
The necessity within the British Isles in the late 1600s and early 1700s to create a tortoiseshell appearance was driven by work of the French cabinet maker Andre-Charles Boulle who used polished tortoiseshell inlaid with brass scroll work to create ‘boulle work’. Such pieces selling for huge sums and being highly favoured and collected by the British Royalty and aristocracy.
It is believed that very few British cabinet makers knew how to create this mulberry wood and that the staining process was hotly guarded. Prominent exponents were Coxed and Woster - their mulberry-wood work usually inlaid with pewter stringing and mounts.
Very few mulberry wood pieces have ever come to the market. This is a superb quality example from a private estate where it has been in the same family for many generations. The cabinet work is exceptional and the whole is in very original condition. The well developed colour and patina are glorious.
Made by hand in c. 1720 and of small elegant proportions, this is one of the finest pieces of furniture I have had the pleasure of getting to know and it is an extremely important and rare early 17th century bureau bookcase with a sound and long provenance.
The condition, colour and patination is unsurpassed.
Dimensions are:
39 inches wide, 24.5 inches deep and 75 inches high.
When the fall is open the max depth is 36 inches. The height from the floor to the writing surface is 29 inches.
For metric please multiply by 2.5 I describe and photograph my pieces accurately and with the aim that on arrival each will exceed expectations.
I operate a full refund guarantee and am always happy to give free, honest and friendly advice.
SellerWebberley Antiques
View all stock from
Webberley Antiques

The Barn
Battle Road
Dallington
East Sussex
TN21 9LQ
Tel : 01424 838557
Non UK callers : +44 1424 838557
Get directions to Webberley Antiques
The well fitted interior of the bureau with mulberry faced drawers and original well with two secret oak drawers hidden within the well’s inner framework.
The upper doors with three bookmatched panels of mulberry on each, set within a beautiful and fine featherbanded border. The front of the bureau fall with four bookmatched panels again set within a fine featherbanded border. And the front of each principal drawer beneath the fall with the same mulberry bookmatched panelling within featherbanded borders.
The small drawers within the bureau have incredibly slender and fine oak linings with tiny dovetails. One drawer has a replacement lining but all others are original as are all of the oak linings to the drawers in the upper case and the to the principal drawers. Original backboards, original bun feet with some wear and old worm holes but long since dead. Both locks original and with the same working key.
Mulberry is a very rare timber. It is not taken from a Mulberry bush or tree, it is a thickly cut veneer (usually field maple or sycamore) stained and then washed in an acid which has had copper and other metals dissolved in it. This creates beautiful highlights and contrasts in the wood to make it resemble tortoiseshell.
The necessity within the British Isles in the late 1600s and early 1700s to create a tortoiseshell appearance was driven by work of the French cabinet maker Andre-Charles Boulle who used polished tortoiseshell inlaid with brass scroll work to create ‘boulle work’. Such pieces selling for huge sums and being highly favoured and collected by the British Royalty and aristocracy.
It is believed that very few British cabinet makers knew how to create this mulberry wood and that the staining process was hotly guarded. Prominent exponents were Coxed and Woster - their mulberry-wood work usually inlaid with pewter stringing and mounts.
Very few mulberry wood pieces have ever come to the market. This is a superb quality example from a private estate where it has been in the same family for many generations. The cabinet work is exceptional and the whole is in very original condition. The well developed colour and patina are glorious.
Made by hand in c. 1720 and of small elegant proportions, this is one of the finest pieces of furniture I have had the pleasure of getting to know and it is an extremely important and rare early 17th century bureau bookcase with a sound and long provenance.
The condition, colour and patination is unsurpassed.
Dimensions are:
39 inches wide, 24.5 inches deep and 75 inches high.
When the fall is open the max depth is 36 inches. The height from the floor to the writing surface is 29 inches.
For metric please multiply by 2.5 I describe and photograph my pieces accurately and with the aim that on arrival each will exceed expectations.
I operate a full refund guarantee and am always happy to give free, honest and friendly advice.
Price
Click here to message the seller The price has been listed in British Pounds.
Conversion rates as of 1/APR/2025. Euro & Dollar prices will vary and should only be used as a guide.
Always confirm final price with dealer.
Category Antique Furniture
Date c.1720
Early 18th Century Antiques
Item code as216a2095
Status For Sale
£19000.00 
$24553.70
€22718.30

$24553.70

€22718.30

Looking to Buy?
Arrange a final price and delivery details directly with the dealerClick here to message the seller
Conversion rates as of 1/APR/2025. Euro & Dollar prices will vary and should only be used as a guide.
Always confirm final price with dealer.
View all stock from
Webberley Antiques


Battle Road
Dallington
East Sussex
TN21 9LQ
Tel : 01424 838557
Non UK callers : +44 1424 838557
Get directions to Webberley Antiques
You may also be interested in











