Skip Navigation LinksHome Page > News > News Article
news
news search
Auction Previews
Cochrane collection to be sold at Sworders
18 August 2008
THE Standsted Mountfitchet saleroom Sworders are to sell the contents of Lancotbury Manor, a timber-framed Tudor manor house near Dunstable that was the former home of David Cochrane and Bernard Gulley.

The two men – who together were Bernard Gulley Antiques, the Bedfordshire dealers in vernacular furniture and works of art – restored the house and gardens to provide the backdrop for a lifetime collection.

Following ill-health and the sale of Lancotbury, David Cochrane has decided to sell his considerable holdings of 18th and early 19th century pottery (particularly delft and creamware), 18th century samplers, woolwork and textiles, 17th century country furniture and decorative 17th, 18th and 19th century paintings.

Sworders will offer it for sale, largely without reserve, on September 24. The 400 lots have a value in excess of £300,000.

An English late 19th/early 20th century polychrome wood model of a butcher's shop, 20in x 2ft 4in (50 x 70cm). It carries an estimate of £4000-6000 when Sworders sell the David Cochrane Collection on September 24.
An English late 19th/early 20th century polychrome wood model of a butcher's shop, 20in x 2ft 4in (50 x 70cm). It carries an estimate of £4000-6000 when Sworders sell the David Cochrane Collection on September 24.