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Approximately 16 handmade quilts, including this nice checkerboard square example, will be sold. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.

Specialists of the South to hold onsite country auction Oct. 15-16

Approximately 16 handmade quilts, including this nice checkerboard square example, will be sold. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.
Approximately 16 handmade quilts, including this nice checkerboard square example, will be sold. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.
FOUNTAIN, Fla. – A good old-fashioned onsite country sale, featuring over 800 lots in just about every category imaginable, will be held Oct. 15-16 at the home of Maryland Cress in Fountain. The auction will be held by Specialists of the South Inc., of Panama City, Fla. LiveAuctioneers will facilitate online bidding.

Fountain is located in the Florida panhandle, south of Interstate 10 and about halfway between Tallahassee and Pensacola. It will be well worth the drive for fans of country items that have been lovingly collected for 45 years. Plus, nearly all the lots will be offered without reserve, selling to the highest bidder, regardless of final price.

The inventory of merchandise is dizzying – far too much to be contained in a one-day sale.

“I’ve been collecting ever since I was 19 and I’m nearly 65 now,” remarked Cress. “Just about everything I own was bought at a yard sale, either here in Florida, or in Ohio where my husband’s brother lives. The Ohio items I purchased at Amish auctions, which are great.”

In fact, Maryland was so impressed by the Amish she had a notion to pack everything up and ship it to Ohio to let them handle the auction. Then the reality of just how much she owned set in, and she got in touch with Logan Adams of Specialists of the South. The two hit it off right away.

“Good thing,” Cress said. “It would’ve taken a 40-foot container to ship all that stuff.”

The Cress collections include over 20 antique butter churns, vintage clocks (wall, desk and mantel), primitives and American furniture, Hoosier cabinets, barrister bookcases, about 16 handmade quilts, small farm tools and hand tools, old sewing machines, art pottery (Roseville, Hull and Weller), Fenton glass, pocket knives and Bowie knives, BB guns, bayonets and more.

The “more” would include old children’s games and puzzles, jelly cupboards, piano stools, old water pumps, a large collection of rooster figures, wagon wheels in a variety of sizes, cream separators, coffee grinders, older tins, cast-iron pieces (to include some banks), kitchen collectibles (canisters, salt and pepper shakers, spice racks), crocks and some silver pieces.

That’s not all. There will also be about 18 biscuit jars, nine Tom’s and Lance’s peanut butter and cracker jars, ironstone, Jadeite, Shawnee, Beswick, scales, inkwells, an oak icebox, desks, mirrors, cedar chests, rugs, dolls, music boxes, canes, brass, Blue Danube china (to include a service for 12, with extras and serving pieces), Fiesta, taxidermy examples, oil lamps, marbles, horse memorabilia, comics, fire screens and sewing baskets/boxes/cabinets (to include a nice Hepplewhite-style sewing cabinet).

“It’s just staggering to sift through all that Maryland has and have to inventory it all,” said Ms. Adams in mock exasperation. “If I wasn’t having so much fun poring through all this merchandise, it might feel a bit like work.”

The auction will kick off both days at 9 a.m. Eastern, with a preview both days from 7-9 a.m.

The two Hoosier cabinets are bound to get a lot of attention. One, made around 1900, features a pullout enamel shelf, flower mill, bread drawer, tambour lift and wire racks. The other boasts three stained glass doors and was crafted in Australia. Also sold will be an Empire china cabinet with large scrolling feet, bowed glass door and sides and shaped glass shelves.

Additional furniture pieces will include a Globe stacking wooden bookcase in three sections with double glass doors in each section (51 1/4 inches tall by 33 inches wide) and a Bennington Colchester pine rolltop desk with brass and wooden pulls (43 1/4 inches tall by 54 inches wide). Also sold will be an Eastlake wall-hung beveled mantel mirror in six sections.

Butter churns will include a staved wood rocking barrel churn on a stand shaped like a keg; an Acme Ball churn (No. 0) made by H.H. Palmer Co., Rockford, Ill., circa 1900; and an all-metal Dazey tabletop 430B churn, dated Dec. 18, 1917, 26 1/2 inches tall. The sale will also feature not only Tom’s and Lance’s jars, but also a Tom’s Toasted Peanuts advertising display case.

The clocks will feature a fashion wall clock with two faces, reading day and date, made by the Southern Calendar Clock Co. (1875, St. Louis). Vintage banks will include a Buster Brown and Tige cast-iron bank (5 1/2 inches tall); an A.C. Williams still bank showing a lion on a tub with rope; and a Minute Man bank with liberty bell and cannon by Banthrico Inc., Chicago.

Biscuit jars will include a covered jar from Japan with wide blue border and repousse flowers in white, white flower finial and wrapped handle (8 inches tall); and a porcelain jar painted in shades of navy blue on a cream colored background with gold accents and bead border (8 1/2 inches tall). Also sold will be a taxidermy turkey perched on a branch (34 1/2 inches tall).

Titles from a collection of Little Leather Library Miniature Books of Classics include The Ancient Mariner, Man Without a Country, Rip Van Winkle, Alice in Wonderland, Confessions of an Opium Dealer, Othello, Sonnets of the Portuguese and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (3 inches by 4 inches). Also sold will be a painted cement lawn jockey, 26 inches tall, and a large cannonball.

A few nice silver pieces will cross the block, to include a sterling tea strainer on a stand marked “Industria Peruana, Plata Esterlina” (made by Camusso, 6 1/4 inches wide). Bowls will feature a blue opalescent hobnail glass bowl with a ruffled edge, 10 inches in diameter, and a hand-hewn rectangular dough bowl with a tin patch repair on the side, 33 1/2 inches in length.

Rounding out the sale’s expected top lots are a good number of advertising signs, many of them tin and paper (to include Mother’s brand foods, Sunbeam bread, Galvanic soap and a Kleenex sign from the 1940s); a cane/umbrella stand made from hames and horseshoes, with walking sticks (one with a brass falcon head and one a deer hoof); a Roseville Snowberry variegated green and tan vase, 12 1/2 inches tall; some nice tablecloths; and a Beswick Ware mug marked “Sairey Gamp” with an umbrella handle and polka-dotted bonnet.

For details visit Specialists of the South Inc.’s Web site SpecialistsoftheSouth.com or phone 850- 785-2577.

 


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


Collectors of biscuit jars will be happy to learn that about 18 will be offered in the auction. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.
Collectors of biscuit jars will be happy to learn that about 18 will be offered in the auction. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.
Two Hoosier cabinets will cross the block during the sale, including this fine example. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.
Two Hoosier cabinets will cross the block during the sale, including this fine example. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.
Fashion wall clock with two faces, made by Southern Calendar Clock Co., St. Louis. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.
Fashion wall clock with two faces, made by Southern Calendar Clock Co., St. Louis. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.
Blue Danube china service for 12, with extras and serving pieces, on a nice tablecloth. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.
Blue Danube china service for 12, with extras and serving pieces, on a nice tablecloth. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.
Over 20 antique butter churns, including the two pictured here, will change hands Oct. 15-16. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.
Over 20 antique butter churns, including the two pictured here, will change hands Oct. 15-16. Image courtesy of Specialists of the South Inc.