Description
Oil Portrait of Captain Sir Gamaliel Nightingale Attributed to John Simmons the Younger (Nailsea 1715-1780)
A Masterpiece of Georgian Naval Portraiture
A rare and historically rich British 18th-century oil portrait of a distinguished Royal Navy officer and baronet, combining martial achievement, aristocratic lineage, geographic legacy and archival depth - ideal for collectors of military, historical and aristocratic art.
Subject and Medium
Title: Portrait of Captain Sir Gamaliel Nightingale by John Simmons the Younger (Nailsea 1715-1780)
Medium: Oil on canvas.
The sitter is portrayed during his youthful prime in formal Royal Navy uniform - a rich navy-blue coat with crisp white linen facings and gilt details - embodying rank and composure. The confident brushwork and refined contrasts of colour and tone place this work firmly within the stylistic realm of c1760 mid-18th-century British portraiture.
Composition and Technique
Colour and Form: Harmonious balance between deep navy, bright whites and gilt accents draws the viewer's eye to the sitter.
Brushwork: Subtle modulation of flesh tones contrasts with more assertive handling of uniform and metallic details, revealing an assured painterly hand.
Spatial Depth: A restrained, atmospheric background enhances focus on the subject's presence and psychological strength.
This technical sophistication aligns with works attributed to John Simmons the Younger, known for his portraiture of gentry and naval sitters.
About the Artist - John Simmons the Younger
John Simmons (of Nailsea, 1715-1780) was an 18th-century British portrait painter working principally in the West Country (Somerset/Bristol region). He is documented in auction archives for portraits of local gentry and distinguished figures, including works sold at Bonhams and Christie's, demonstrating a market presence and stylistic reach consistent with provincial portraitists of his era.
Simmons's oeuvre shows a progression from earlier work influenced by leading British portrait styles to mature portraits of high quality and technical confidence. He often left works unsigned, making attribution reliant on stylistic analysis, documented sales and catalogue references rather than autograph signatures.
His portraits combine dignified restraint with careful attention to costume and facial character, aligning him with British provincial portraiture traditions, often compared in quality with better-known contemporaries by scholars and auction cataloguers.
About the Sitter - Captain Sir Gamaliel Nightingale, 9th Baronet (1731-1791)
Captain Sir Gamaliel Nightingale was born 15 February 1731 at Kneesworth Hall, Cambridgeshire, into one of England's long-established baronet families. He succeeded his elder brother to the title in 1782 and spent much of his life in active Royal Navy service.
? Education and Early Naval Training
He entered the Royal Naval Academy in 1744, receiving structured training in navigation, gunnery and seamanship - an approach distinguishing professionally trained officers in the mid-18th century. This early education laid the foundation for his long and varied career.
He first served at sea as a midshipman aboard HMS Rippon (54 guns) and HMS Porcupine (16 guns), gaining essential early experience before formal commissioning.
Progression, Ranks and Commands
Over a 35-year naval career (1744-1779), Nightingale advanced systematically through ranks and commands:
Lieutenant and Early Officer Posts
Passed the Lieutenant's Examination (1752) - a formal professional milestone.
Served as lieutenant aboard several British warships, including HMS Hind, HMS Falcon, HMS Wager and as senior lieutenant on HMS Prince George (80 guns) and HMS Dublin (74 guns), gaining broad tactical experience across vessel classes.
First Independent Commands
Commander, HMS Badger (10 guns; 1757-1758) - his first independent command.
Captain, HMS Vengeance (28 guns; 1758-1761) - a captured French vessel recommissioned into British service. Under his command, Vengeance operated as part of British squadrons and took part in strategic operations, including contributing to the British presence around Quiberon Bay during the Seven Years' War.
Notably, on 13 March 1761, Vengeance captured the 44-gun French privateer Entreprenant near Land's End - a significant independent action reflecting Nightingale's tactical capability.
Later Command
Captain, HMS Flora (32 guns; 1759-1763), another captured warship successfully integrated into Royal Navy operations.
He was placed on half-pay in 1779, marking his retirement from active command consistent with Royal Navy practice in the shift toward peacetime.
Strategic and Tactical Importance
Nightingale's career reflects the critical role of frigate command in 18th-century naval strategy:
Independent patrols and convoy escort duties, integral to protecting British maritime commerce.
Anti-privateer sweeps and reconnaissance, disrupting enemy coastal activity.
Engagements in wider fleet operations, including linkage to major fleet actions such as Quiberon Bay, pivotal in securing British naval dominance.
This combination of independent command and tactical execution underscores his operational importance beyond mere rank.
Exploration Legacy - Nightingale Island
In 1760, during naval service in the South Atlantic, Nightingale charted or observed a volcanic isle near the Tristan da Cunha group that was subsequently named Nightingale Island in his honour. Today, it is an Important Bird Area known for its rich avian biodiversity, linking the sitter's legacy to geographic exploration as well as martial service.
Lineage, Heraldry and Estate
Nightingale Baronetcy of Newport Pond
Created on 1 September 1628, the Nightingale baronetcy is one of England's older hereditary honours.
Coat of Arms: Per pale ermine and gules, a rose counterchanged
Crest: An ibex sejant argent armed and maned or
Motto: Pro Rege et Patria ("For King and Country")
These heraldic symbols communicate martial tradition, noble heritage and steadfast service - all reflected in the sitter's career.
Kneesworth Hall - Family Seat
The Nightingale ancestral seat was Kneesworth Hall, Cambridgeshire, acquired by the family in the late 16th century. By the late 1700s, the estate encompassed extensive acreage and leased holdings near Cambridge, illustrating deep regional influence. The Hall remained central to family life for over two centuries, anchoring the Nightingale social and economic identity.
Family, Descendants and Extended Legacy
Sir Gamaliel married Maria Clossen (1739-1789), daughter of a Hamburg family, a union that exemplifies cross-channel gentry alliances of the period. Their heir, Sir Edward Nightingale, 10th Baronet (1760-1804), married his cousin Eleanor Nightingale in 1782, consolidating family estates and influence.
Their children included:
Sir Charles Ethelston Nightingale, 11th Baronet (1784-1846)
Gamaliel Nightingale (1786-1818)
Julia Nightingale (1787-1815), married to James Markland
Elizabeth Sophia Nightingale (1790-1864), married to Charles Ewan Law
and others, forming alliances with landed and professional families across England and reinforcing the Nightingale name in gentry circles.
Multi-Generational Military and Civic Tradition
The Nightingale family sustained a tradition of military and civic service across generations:
Descendants served as officers in the Third Foot Guards, Royal Marines, and British Army in conflicts from the Second Anglo-Burmese War to the World Wars.
Major-General Manners Ralph Willmot Nightingale (1871-1956) earned high honours for service with the 5th Royal Gurkha Rifles.
Many Nightingales are memorialised at St Peter and St Paul's Church, Bassingbourn cum Kneesworth, underscoring lasting civic presence.
Dimensions Canvas Size: approx. 76.7 cm Height × 63.6 cm cm Width
Framed Size: 92.75 cm Height × 79 cm Width x 5.5cm Depth
Frame
The portrait is presented in a substantial giltwood frame characteristic of late Georgian and early Regency decorative practice. The moulded frame features a subtle acanthus leaf relief and egg-and-dart motif along the inner lip, culminating in a broad outer plane that complements the work's formal subject matter without overpowering it. The warm golden tone enhances the deep blues and whites of the sitter's uniform, providing an elegant visual transition from painting to architectural space when displayed. This frame not only protects and supports the work but also contributes aesthetically to its presence in a private collection, gallery or historic interior. Its scale and style are well-matched to the painting's provenance and period.
? Signed / Artist Attribution
This portrait is not signed on the canvas, a fact noted in the Bonhams catalogue description and in secondary market listings. The absence of a signature is not unusual in provincial 18th-century British portraiture - many practising artists of this era, including John Simmons the Younger, did not sign all commissions.
Attribution to John Simmons the Younger (Nailsea 1715-1780) is supported by multiple lines of evidence:
Stylistic comparison: The treatment of fabric, flesh modelling, and facial character are consistent with documented works attributed to Simmons in auction archives and specialist references.
Provenance context: The Bonhams catalogue text and the Bonhams label on the verso (visible in images of the back of the painting) link this canvas to Simmons's documented market history.
Regional practice: Simmons was active in the West Country and Bristol area, and his documented portrait corpus includes half-length commissioned portraits of gentry and naval figures from the same period and social milieu.
While there is no autograph signature, the preponderance of stylistic, provenance and market corroboration supports a confident attribution to Simmons. A specialist technical examination (pigment analysis, UV and raking light photography) could further document the materials and reinforce the attribution for scholarly or institutional purposes.
Provenance and Archival Documentation
This portrait's public provenance includes appearance in Bonhams London Old Master sale in Feb 2024 lot 9 with the line "Private Collection, Europe, since at least 1990".
Archival Highlight - Chesterton Terrier (1768)
Cambridgeshire Archives has acquired a rare 1768 Chesterton terrier - a detailed land survey listing field boundaries, tenants, plot sizes and values. It includes a 1694 transcript and shows that part of this land was purchased from Captain Sir Gamaliel Nightingale in 1772, later sold and incorporated into St John's College, Cambridge property. This connection enriches the sitter's documented landholding history and ties him to tangible 18th-century estate activity. (Cambridgeshire County Council Archives)
Condition Report
This 18th-century portrait remains in good age-appropriate condition:
Stable canvas with characteristic historic craquelure.
Well-preserved colours, especially in uniform hues.
Minor frame wear consistent with age.
Sympathetic historic retouching evident.
Condition of the frame is good for its age:
Scuffs and rubs consistent with use and display over many decades.
Small areas of gilt surface loss and expected abrasion on high points, typical of historic giltwood.
Structural soundness maintained; no significant losses or major breaks in the moulding profiles.
Why You'll Love It
Named naval officer with fully documented service.
Deep aristocratic lineage with ancient heraldry.
Geographic legacy - Nightingale Island.
Multi-generational family impact in military and civic life.
Archival linkage via Chesterton Terrier (1768).
Cross-collecting appeal - maritime, genealogical, aristocratic and art historical.
Worldwide shipping available. Professionally packaged and fully insured for safe global delivery.
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Sources and Notes
• Captain Sir Gamaliel Nightingale - naval biography (Wikipedia, naval records).
• Chesterton Terrier acquisition - Cambridgeshire Archives press.
• Nightingale baronetcy history and Kneesworth Hall estate.
• Peerage and genealogical sources.
Reserve: $12,000.00
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Condition
Used
Buyer's Premium
20%
Oil Portrait Captain Sir Gamaliel Nightingale By John Simmons the Younger c1760
$12,000.00
$17,000
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