Browse Items (30 total)

20153946a.jpg
This early eighteenth-century gaming counter bears the arms of the Coulson family. It comes from a set that was likely produced for William Coulson (1692-1750) of Jesmond House in Northumberland or his son. William married Jane Blenkinsopp (1696-?)…

20153912a.jpg
This counter comes from a set made for Eldred Lancelot Lee and his wife Isabella Gough or one of their two sons, Lancelot Lee or Harvey Lee.i This collection includes another counter from the Lee family, but it is unclear if they are from the same…

201539104a.jpg
The arms of the Bootle family of Lancashire, England, decorate this counter. The counter is from a set made for one of two brothers; Robert Bootle (about 1708-1758), a captain and later member of the Board of Directors of the Honourable East India…

201539105a.jpg
The arms of the Bootle family of Lancashire, England, decorate this counter. The counter is from a set made for one of two brothers; Robert Bootle (about 1708-1758), a captain and later member of the Board of Directors of the Honourable East India…

2015_39_44a.jpg
This gaming counter is smaller than others produced during the early 18th century, but its owner lived large. James Brydges (1673-1744), the man who owned this counter, was the eldest son of the 8th Baron Chandos of Sudeley. [1] He dropped out of…

2015_39_51.jpg
This counter comes from an early eighteenth century set made for Charles Dubois (1658-1740).Dubois was an avid botanist, and served as a treasurer for the East India Trading Company.iDuboisspent three decades (1708-1738) working for the East India…

20153932a.jpg
This counter is among the oldest in the collection and was likely designed for Ombre — a Spanish card game that requires a steadfast approach.[1] It was ordered by the Godfrey family of Kent, along with around four sets of Chinese armorial…

20153954a.jpg
Personalized gaming counters like this one were part of a set and used like modern-day poker chips. However, what makes this counter interesting is not what is engraved on it, but what is omitted. It was ordered by the Godfrey family of Kent, along…

2015394a.jpg
This counter shows the crest from the coat of arms of the Duke of Gordon of Scottland. It consists of a stag’s head and neck and a ducal coronet.[1] Unlike most other counters this one comes in the unusual “double dog of Fo” shape.…

2015_39_45a.jpg
This counter comes from a set made for Harry Gough (1681-1751) and his wife Elizabeth Hynde (?-1774). Gough made his fortune in the China Trade, starting out as an assistant at the age of eleven and rising to captain by 1707. Gough’s profits…
Output Formats

atom, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2