Wednesday 15 January 2014

Martha Vandewall and the bust of Alexander Pope given to William Seward,



The William Seward / Martha Vandewall Marble bust of Alexander Pope by Louis Francois Roubiliac.

The family of Samuel Vandewall (1719 - 61) 
and his wife Martha Vandewall (-1794)



Updated 23 June 2023.
 
Including another portrait of Mrs Martha Vandewall inside a gold snuff box by Gervase Spencer.

The following notes were compiled to place the Vandewall family within upper strata of 18th Century society and to show that they were a very rich and cultured but also perhaps self effacing Quakers. 

Martha Vandewall was the owner of the bust of Pope before William Seward.

Brief biographical details of the Vandewall Family in the Eighteenth Century, with particular reference to Samuel Vandewall (1719 -1761), and his wife Martha Vandewall (1711 - 1794), ne Barrow, formerly Mrs Harris Neate (1714 - 1742) and her son Thomas Neate. These people were all Quakers.

Eighteenth century Vandewall family information comes from a typescript manuscript by JJ Green at the Quaker Records at Euston Road, London.

The Vandewalls arrived in England from Holland some time in the late Sixteenth Century.

1679. John Vandewall I of Harwich marries Susannah Cottisford. c
.1684, perhaps related "The Frankford Company" had become the purchasers of a large tract of about 25,000 acres of land in Pennsylvania, part of which was already located by Jacob Vandewall, and most likely had their agents scattered through Germany to induce young and active men to emigrate thither with their families. 

On Holmes' Map may be seen the following inscription: "Germantown - Jacob Vandewall and Company." We do not know who this Jacob Vandewall was, but as the mother of Wigard Levering another Dutch Quaker settler in Pennsylvania, was called Elizabeth Vandewall, he was perhaps a relative who had become interested in this great land speculation.



1705. Marriage of Thomas Neate of the City of Bristol, merchant to Love Harris, daughter of Nathaniel Harris at Chippenham.

1706. Birth of Harris Neate, First husband of Martha Vandewall ne Barrow at Castle Green, Bristol.

1710. John Vandewall II, Draper and citizen of London marries Martha Diamond.


1713. John Vandewall II, marries Anne Moore the mother of Samuel Vandewall.


1719. Birth of Samuel Vandewall at Crutched Friars.


1728. John Vandewall II marries Martha Goldney eldest daughter of Thomas Goldney the elder. (See The Goldenys of Bristol, A Bristol Merchant Dynasty. Bristol Records Soc.1998).



1730. Death of John Vandewall II. His executors are Sylvanus Bevan, FRS, Apothecary of 2 Plough Court, Lombard Street, London. Thomas Goldeny of Clifton, Bristol (of Goldney Grotto fame) and Joseph Moore of London ( the father of his wife). His estate is left in trust for his children.

Joseph Moore (d. 1740) was the owner of the Copperas Works at Greenwich, which later belonged to Sam.Vandewall and then passed to his stepson Thomas Neate. 

When Joseph Moore died he was worth over £30,000.

The Copperas industry consisted of turning nodules of copperas (bisulphide of iron) into green copperas or green vitriol ( ferrous sulphate of iron). Green copperas was used, amongst other things for the dyeing of cloth and leather black, and the manufacture of black ink. This industry seems to have been a virtual Quaker monopoly at this time.


Perhaps not a coincidence, Sylvanus Bevan, was an apothecary of No 2, Plough Court, Lombard Street in 1715. The home of the Pope family until 1715. Alexander Pope was born at 2 Plough Court in 1685.

See Plough Court, the Story of a Notable Pharmacy, 1715 - 1927. (London, Allen and Hanbury, 1927).

Alexander Pope a Life, Maynard Mack, 1985.

Copperas Industry by Tim Allen Canterbury Archaeological Trust, forthcoming.

Quakers in Science and Industry, Arthur Raistrick. 1968.


1733/4. Marriage of Harris Neate of the island of Jamaica, merchant, to Martha Barrow (later Vandewall) daughter of Jonathan Barrow of the County of Monmouth.

At about this time both Harris Neate and Samuel Vandewall had their portraits painted  (attributed to
George Knapton). These two portraits are currently still with the family.






                      
 Harris Neate. 

Attributed bto George Knapton. (1698 - 1778)

_____________________





Samuel Vandewall 

Attributed to George Knapton.




I am very grateful to Susannah Harris Hughs for allowing me to photograph these portraits.

________________________________


  1. Birth of Thomas Neate at Laurence Pountney Hill, City. Harris Neate & Co Merchants noted in Kent's Directory of London.

  1. Birth of Martha Neate at Laurence Pountney Hill. City.






Portrait of Mrs Neate, of Donnington by George Knapton (1698-1778).

 Portrait of Mrs Neate, of Donnington, Hampshire, half-length, in an embroidered silver shawl trimmed with fur, seated by a table with a spaniel her lap, in an interior, beside a polescreen, 

oil on canvas 40 x 50 in. 
In a carved and gilded 18th Century Maratta frame. 

By descent in the family of the sitter.

.
Sold Christies - Lot 28,   Christie's -Nov 25, 2003 - London.

1742. Death of Harris Neate. Died of fever. Described as of Lawrence Pountney Hill, City of London.






Samuel Vandewall, 1719 - 61 by Thomas Hudson c. 1745.

This portrait was sold by Sotheby's Lot 45, 22 November 1967.


1744. The Marriage of Sam. Vandewall and Martha Neate formerly Barrow, recorded at Hereford Worcester and Wales Quaker Meeting House.


C.1744 - 1746. The portrait of Samuel Vandewall is painted by Thomas Hudson (1701 - 1779) (former pupil, and son in law of Jonathon Richardson, an intimate of Alexander Pope). In 1745, Hudson was living at 55 -56 Great Queen Street. Hudson accompanied Roubiliac to Rome in July - October 1752. Joshua Reynolds was a pupil of Hudson.

Records Nat. Portrait Gallery Portrait of Samuel Vandewall in Collection Admiral Sir Walter Cowan Bt.

Sothebys, Nov. 22 1967. Lot 45. Prov. By descent from the sitter? Catalogue Illustration .



1745. Birth of Joseph Vandewall son of Samuel and Martha at the Vandewall house at Brabant Court. Phillpot Lane, Fenchurch Street, London.



                                         


Joseph Vandewall by Joshua Reynolds.

c.1746/7.

127 x 102.9 cms

       Sold Sotheby's. by Commander C.E. Neate, on 3 July 1956.




1747. Death of Joseph Vandewall aged 2 ½. There is a portrait of him (above) painted by Sir Joshua Reynolds (see British Pictures, Christies 15, April 1994).

Sold from the collection of Commander C.E.Neate of Alvescot Oxfordshire, Sothebys 4 July 1956 to Agnews. Sold Christies 15 Apr. 1994


1748. The portrait of Thomas Neate, his sister Martha and their Tutor Mr Needham is painted by Joshua Reynolds.







The Neate Children - Thomas and Martha with their Tutor - Thomas Needham.

1748.

Joshua Reynolds.

Metropolitan Museum, New York.



Martha Neate, married John Williams of Panthowell, Trelech a’r Betws, Carmarthenshire, in 1766.

 

Her brother, Thomas, married Charlotte Seward in 1771 and they settled at Binfield, Their first child and heir was the Reverend Thomas Neate, born in 1775.


The tutor, Thomas Needham was a witness to the will of Charlotte's husband, John Williams, and was a beneficiary in Samuel Vandewall's will (National Archives, Public Record Office, Kew, Surrey, PROB 11/864 and 11/988;


This portrait is now at The Metropolitan Museum New York.With provenance - Thomas Neate, Binfield (until d. 1825); the Rev. A.Neate (in 1857); Miss Mary Neate, Bampton, Faringdon (in 1870); Commander Charles B. Neate (until 1916); Captain Arthur C. Burnaby Neate (1916 - at least 1918): Ogden Mills, New York (before 1929): Josephine Mercy Heathcote Haskell, New York (until d.1982); Heathcote Art Foundation (1982 - 1986). 

See Sir Joshua Reynolds - Complete Catalogue of his Paintings; David Mannings, Martin Postle.

.............................


Martha Neate married John Williams (d.1773) of Pant Howel, Carmarthen. Their daughter Margarette Vandewall Williams (d.1831) married the Reverend William Shippen Willes of Cirencester (d.1832). 

Info. Historic Carmarthenshire Homes, Francis Jones.

Note: Mr Needham was possibly John Turberville Needham (1713 - 1781).


1751. Samuel Vandewall takes Lindsey House, Arch Row, now 60, Lincolns Inn Fields. 

‘Lindsey House Perhaps historically, the most important single house in London’ (John Summerson).


Note. Originally it was one great house, the centrepiece of Arch Row, perhaps designed by Inigo Jones and put up for the gentleman speculator William Newton in 1638 - 41 (see Vitrouvios Britanicus for elevation and plans it was divided into two in 1751 and altered by Isaac Ware (who sat to Roubiliac in 1741.) These become 59 and 60 Lincolns Inn Fields. Other residents include the future Prime Minister Spencer Percival (1762 - 1812). The house still stands although much altered. 

Henry Shiffner M.P. an executor of Sam Vandewall’s will lived at 59 from 1752.

Info. from Survey of London.

1753. Sam. Vandewall subscribes £5 to a fund for the suppression of Lawlessness at Blackheath.


1754. Sam. Vandewall purchases the Lordship of the Manor, and the Rectory of Aldenham, Hertford from the Prime Minister - Thomas Pelham Holles, the Duke of Newcastle (1693 - 1768), who lived two doors away from the Vandewall family at Lincolns Inn Fields. (Newcastle was Prime Minister (1754 - 1756 and 1757 - 1762).

1760. Easter Term, 1760, Court of Kings Bench, Rex v Vandewall, presided over by Lord Mansfield.




__________________






       Miniature of Samuel Vandewall by Gervase Spencer c.1760. 

                                

Lot 1 - Sotheby's, Olympia (March 06, 2003).




  1. Death of Sam. Vandewall Esquire at Lincolns Inn Fields. See The Gentleman's Magazine.
He was buried at his vault at Jordans Quaker Meeting House Burial Ground, Chalfont St Peters, Bucks. William Penn of Pennsylvania is buried close by.


In his will he leaves his wife Martha £500 / year, and gives her a further sum of £5,000, he also gives her the house in Lincolns Inn Fields “where he resides when in London and also gives her all his furniture, books pictures etc. at both his houses at Lincolns Inn Fields and at Greenwich.

He also left Thomas Needham Esq. Of Cliffords Inn, Gent. £800.  ( PCC 110 Cheslyn.)              

The rest of his property he leaves in trust for Thomas and Martha Neate and four other relatives.




__________________

Is this a portrait of Mrs Martha Vandewall?  (1711 - 1794).

Mrs Martha Vandewall. nee Barrow, she was previously married (6 March 1734) to Harris Neate (1706 -42).

Portrait by Gervase Spencer - initialled GS and dated 1757.

 The interior of the base later inscribed: Martha / Vandewall / Apl 1798.

Martha Vandewall would have been aged 46 in 1757.

It is dangerous to make assumptions about portraiture but I suspect that this isn't Mrs Vandewall.




















Text below lifted from Sotheby's catalogue.

Lot 25, May, 2022.


5.7 cms tall.


Of upright cartouche form, the lid inset with a panel of banded creamy grey agate within pierced and chased rocaille decorations, reeded gold rims and bow-shaped thumbpiece, the shaped sides also chased with rocaille ornament and flowers, the interior of the lid set with an enamel miniature of Mrs Vandewall, by Gervase Spencer, signed and dated: G. S 1757, wearing an ermine-trimmed blue dress, lace collar and baroque pearl earrings, in rose gold frame and plaited light brown hair border, the interior of the base later inscribed: Martha / Vandewall / Apl 1798, the gold unmarked.


_____________________________

Martha Vandewall.

Philadephia Museum of Art.

This photograph added 23 June 2023.





Portrait of Mrs. Vanderwall 

They say c. 1766.

By Benjamin West (English (born America), 1738–1820).

Oil on canvas.

 (81.3 x 108 cm).

Gift of Philip and Muriel Berman, 2004.

Accession Number:         2004-8-3.


..........................................







                                                Mrs Martha Vandewall by Benjamin West.

C.1770. Both the portraits of Mrs Vandewall and her son Thomas Neate were painted by Benjamin West. R.A. There is an old hand written label on the back of the portrait of Thomas Neate stating “Thomas Neate with boar spear the boy of Sir Joshua's picture..... He lived for many years at Binfield Lodge, Berks .... Neate”


The family appear to have rented the house that was rebuilt on the site of Alexander Pope's former home at Binfield, some time after the death of Samuel Vandewall.








Notes. Binfield Lodge was the family home of Alexander Pope from 1705 -1716, when Catholics had to reside at least 10 miles from the City of London.








Binfield Lodge - rebuilt circa 1720, The building on the left a later extension.


Popes father was a linen draper who dealt in ‘Hollands’ - very fine Linens originally produced in the Low Countries

In an article in the Home Counties Magazine (2) 1902, entitled Pope at Binfield it states that the history of the house begins in 1695, when ‘Gabriel Young of Warfield’ (a village just two miles up the road from Binfield) ‘sold to Charles Rackett, of Hammersmith…for the sum of £445, all the measure of tenement called Whitehill House, with five closes of arable or pasture land….

The house was at this time in the occupation of the one Thomas Holmes as tenant…

The article describes how Charles Racket was ‘no doubt the husband of Magdalen Pope, the poets elder half sister. The deed of conveyance was witnessed by Alexander Pope, who 3 years later purchased it for the same price. 

Pope mentions the Racketts in his correspondence, in the year 1711, as living at Hall Grove, a house near Bagshot (again reasonably close to Binfield). The article suggests that Pope may have gone to reside there at once in the summer of 1698 – when his son was 10. He left the property in trust to his son Alexander Pope, the younger in April 1700. 

At the request of Pope the younger, the house was sold in 1715 to James Tanner for the sum of £500 – Fitzgerald says that with this sale the connection of the poet and his family with Binfield ends, and all trace of them has vanished. His father dyeing two years later, and Pope himself dying in 1743.

From Tanner, the house passed to William Reynolds Esq who died in March 1775 leaving the house to his wife. After her death in the following year, it passed to Elisha Biscoe, who died in 1776, and whose son sold it to James Batson.


After the Batsons, the house was sold to Rev Edward Fane, who sold it to Gerald Fitzgerald Esq in 1841 – passing, upon his death in 1873, to his son Lucius – the author of the article. I’m not sure where Fitzgerald obtained his information – but it is backed up by the notes of Frank Donaldson, who makes reference to the catalogue of sale at Reading Reference library – which detail the contents of the sale in 1887, when Fitzgerald sold the house – shortly after which, the article was published in the Parish Magazine.


In 1754 William Pitt the Elder bought and rebuilt the Manor at Binfield from the Catholic John Dancastle a close friend of Pope. 



In 1757 William Pitt bought Barkham Manor nearby, which on his death in 1783 his brother John Pitt sold to Thomas Fonnereau M.P. son of Thomas Fonnereau, an executor of the will of Samuel Vandewall.





                                               

Another view of the Benjamin West Portrait of Mrs Vandewall.


The portrait of Mrs Vandewall by Benjamin West was sold by Sotheby, Lot 138, 3 May 1961, from the collection of W.H.Willes, (a descendant of Martha Neate), see entry for 1748.






                        




A much higher resolution photograph of Mrs Vandewall but in B&W.


1771. Marriage of Thomas Neate to Charlotte Seward, the sister of William Seward, of Red Cross St. London.


1790. Gentleman's Magazine notes Thomas Neate at Binfield.






Anonymous portrait of Charlotte Neate, nee Seward, still with the family.








Label on the back of the portrait of Charlotte Neate.


___________________


1791 - 1796. Thomas Neate resided at 13 Lansdown Crescent, Bath (info. from Bath archives. - Bath Loyal Ass. 1792).


1794. Death of Martha Vandewall at Bath. Buried at Jordans Meeting House Burial Ground, Buckinghamshire in the vault of Sam.Vandewall.


1796. Amelia daughter of Thomas Neate described in The monthly Magazine as of Binfield, marries AE Young at Orlingbury, Northants

1825. Death of Thomas Neate at Binfield Lodge, Berks.

.........................................

The Seward bust of Pope by Roubiliac which previously belonged to Mrs Vandewall, was inherited from William Seward by the banker William Moreland (1738 -1815).


The Seward / Vandewall bust of Pope then disappears from view for nearly 200 years and reappears in 1967 with Philip and Margaret Andrade, antique dealers of White Oxen Manor, Nr. Rattery, South Brent, Devon TQ10 9JX. 01364 72454.


The Andrades were contacted but were unable to remember their source.


1967. The bust was sold to dealer Robin Eden of Pickwick Manor, Pickwick, Corsham, Wilts. who then sold it to -

Mr.Taylor of Freshford, Bradford on Avon, Wilts.

2000. Sold by Gardiner Holgate - Auctioneers of Bath.


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