Show Off Your Barlings Here

Log in

SmokingPipes.com Updates

Watch for Updates Twice a Week

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
19,964
46,041
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
View attachment 38464

One of my few pipes I haven't smoked. 1887 dated.....in great shape but this will probably be left for display.
That is a spectacularly beautiful pipe! Was this one of the pipes from John Fabris' collection that sold on eBay? I was salivating over it, or one very much like it.
The windcap was called the "Melbourne" and is featured in the pre WW1 Barling catalog that I restored and published. The pipe it's displayed mounted on is the spitting image of yours.
 

jerseysam

Can't Leave
Mar 24, 2019
456
4,566
Liberty Township. OH
That is a spectacularly beautiful pipe! Was this one of the pipes from John Fabris' collection that sold on eBay? I was salivating over it, or one very much like it.
The windcap was called the "Melbourne" and is featured in the pre WW1 Barling catalog that I restored and published. The pipe it's displayed mounted on is the spitting image of yours.

Yes sir (on the Fabris/eBay sale), I bought about a half-dozen late 19th century/early 20th century about a year ago from that collection. Two great pre WW1 BBB that I smoke regularly.....but this Barling (or at least EB/WB stamped) I've left be.

What blows my mind is that the vulcanite on this pipe and the two BBB's blow away like 90% of the vulcanite on my modern pipes. Super comfortable, stays glossy black with the smallest dab of mineral oil.
 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
19,964
46,041
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
I received an e-mail from a contact offering me this 1906 cased bent billiard
How could I refuse.
only the tobacconists name on the bowl T Hamilton Cambridge and the hallmarks on the silver .the letter I for 1906
View attachment 38911View attachment 38912View attachment 38913View attachment 38914
WOW! I can't believe the condtion! And the grain pattern is truly spectacular!

This is the same model as one of the pipes in my 1907 cased companion set! The case looks like it's in great condition ass well!

Congratulations on your latest addition!
 

paulfg

Lifer
Feb 21, 2016
1,590
2,993
Corfu Greece
WOW! I can't believe the condtion! And the grain pattern is truly spectacular!

This is the same model as one of the pipes in my 1907 cased companion set! The case looks like it's in great condition ass well!

Congratulations on your latest addition!
thanks Jesse
my contact who I have bought several pipes from and trust,said it looks as though the pipe has spent most of its life in the case untouched,he did give it the once over though.
I just need to wait a couple of weeks for it to arrive.
I thought I was done buying but couldnt pass this one.I now need to move another pipe out as I would like to keep the numbers down
 

jguss

Lifer
Jul 7, 2013
2,523
6,662
Beautiful pipe Paul! Do you already know about T Hamilton or do you want a little background?
 
  • Like
Reactions: trubka2

jguss

Lifer
Jul 7, 2013
2,523
6,662
The first round of cleaning is done, so I get a little time off for good behavior. Here's the quickie I offered:

Thomas Bonynge Hamilton (1863-1896) spent the first 25 years of his brief life peregrinating around the southeast of England. Born in Wantage, by the age of 18 he was working in Maidstone as an assistant in the draper trade. Two years later he married Margaret Ann Mercer in London, before heading back to Maidstone where he remained until 1889. In that year he found his calling, and after moving his family to Cambridge established a tobacconist shop there at 23, Petty Cury. As near as I can tell this was a first for the Hamiltons, with neither his father nor brothers remotely involved in the tobacco trade. The Petty Cury premises had previously housed pubs, dining establishments, and the like. For those interested in minutiae an apprentice indenture survives from 1889 for what was presumably Hamilton's first assistant, Walter Thomas Littlechild. Hamilton met with gradual success in his new endeavor, and by 1895 was able to open a second branch in Cambridge at 18, Trinity Street. Here the story takes a grim turn. Less than a year later, on June 28, 1896 Hamilton died suddenly and somewhat mysteriously. One local report stated that "...[Hamilton] had not been in the best of health for some time past, and went to Scarborough for a rest. On a Sunday morning he went out for a row with a friend, and on leaving the boat was suddenly taken ill. He afterwards fell down in an unconscious condition, and expired without regaining consciousness." Additional comment would be otiose.

So, since Thomas had been mouldering in his grave for a decade before your pipe was made, who sold it to the original buyer? Was it Tom's widow, Margaret Ann? Alas no; she survived her husband little more than a year, dying in September of 1897 and leaving three small sons behind. It is here that a woman named Alice Howell moves to the fore. Alice can be found named in probate documents for Thomas's estate; a little digging made it clear that Alice Howell's maiden name was Hamilton and that she was in fact Thomas's older sister. A little more digging established that Alice had been living next to the original shop, at 24, Petty Cury, as Thomas's neighbor since at least 1891. Having lost her husband a few years before it's a reasonable inference that Alice moved to Cambridge with her young daughter to be close to family. It's another reasonable guess (but only that) that since Alice was living next door she was familiar with, and perhaps occasionally worked at, Hamilton's store. In any case subsequent censuses and directories make it clear that while the shop continued to trade under the name T. Hamilton, it was owned and managed by Alice after Thomas died. The Trinity location, by the way, fell by the wayside pretty quickly after Hamilton was gone, leaving the original shop at 23, Petty Cury as the survivor. The business continued to appear in directories and advertisements over the twenty years between Thomas's death and Alice's own in 1918. After that point I have yet to find any record of the shop, suggesting that it may have been liquidated as part of the settlement of Alice's estate. Also potentially indicative is the fact that none of Tom's three sons, or Alice's daughter, pursued a career as a tobacconist.

So in brief, your lovely pipe was sold by Alice Howell or one of her employees out of the stock carried at 23, Petty Cury in Cambridge. A beautiful pipe and I hope it gives you great joy.
 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
19,964
46,041
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
The first round of cleaning is done, so I get a little time off for good behavior. Here's the quickie I offered:

Thomas Bonynge Hamilton (1863-1896) spent the first 25 years of his brief life peregrinating around the southeast of England. Born in Wantage, by the age of 18 he was working in Maidstone as an assistant in the draper trade. Two years later he married Margaret Ann Mercer in London, before heading back to Maidstone where he remained until 1889. In that year he found his calling, and after moving his family to Cambridge established a tobacconist shop there at 23, Petty Cury. As near as I can tell this was a first for the Hamiltons, with neither his father nor brothers remotely involved in the tobacco trade. The Petty Cury premises had previously housed pubs, dining establishments, and the like. For those interested in minutiae an apprentice indenture survives from 1889 for what was presumably Hamilton's first assistant, Walter Thomas Littlechild. Hamilton met with gradual success in his new endeavor, and by 1895 was able to open a second branch in Cambridge at 18, Trinity Street. Here the story takes a grim turn. Less than a year later, on June 28, 1896 Hamilton died suddenly and somewhat mysteriously. One local report stated that "...[Hamilton] had not been in the best of health for some time past, and went to Scarborough for a rest. On a Sunday morning he went out for a row with a friend, and on leaving the boat was suddenly taken ill. He afterwards fell down in an unconscious condition, and expired without regaining consciousness." Additional comment would be otiose.

So, since Thomas had been mouldering in his grave for a decade before your pipe was made, who sold it to the original buyer? Was it Tom's widow, Margaret Ann? Alas no; she survived her husband little more than a year, dying in September of 1897 and leaving three small sons behind. It is here that a woman named Alice Howell moves to the fore. Alice can be found named in probate documents for Thomas's estate; a little digging made it clear that Alice Howell's maiden name was Hamilton and that she was in fact Thomas's older sister. A little more digging established that Alice had been living next to the original shop, at 24, Petty Cury, as Thomas's neighbor since at least 1891. Having lost her husband a few years before it's a reasonable inference that Alice moved to Cambridge with her young daughter to be close to family. It's another reasonable guess (but only that) that since Alice was living next door she was familiar with, and perhaps occasionally worked at, Hamilton's store. In any case subsequent censuses and directories make it clear that while the shop continued to trade under the name T. Hamilton, it was owned and managed by Alice after Thomas died. The Trinity location, by the way, fell by the wayside pretty quickly after Hamilton was gone, leaving the original shop at 23, Petty Cury as the survivor. The business continued to appear in directories and advertisements over the twenty years between Thomas's death and Alice's own in 1918. After that point I have yet to find any record of the shop, suggesting that it may have been liquidated as part of the settlement of Alice's estate. Also potentially indicative is the fact that none of Tom's three sons, or Alice's daughter, pursued a career as a tobacconist.

So in brief, your lovely pipe was sold by Alice Howell or one of her employees out of the stock carried at 23, Petty Cury in Cambridge. A beautiful pipe and I hope it gives you great joy.
My understanding is that it was a steak and kidney pie, bought from a street hawker, what done in poor Thomas.