![1715AR01G-05-11-19.jpg](https://gazette-eu-west2.azureedge.net/media/5151/1715ar01g-05-11-19.jpg?width=750&height=500&mode=max&updated=08%2f03%2f2017+16%3a47%3a56)
When the Salisbury saleroom offered the first instalment on April 20, it sold out in record time, creating a new benchmark for these collectables. This selection was not quite such a ground breaker but nonetheless gave a solid repeat sell-out performance.
It included strong prices for the rarest and best items, like this 3oz, 2.25in (6cm) wide unmarked cartouche-shaped example of c.1740.
Normally, a piece like this would make around £2000, reckoned auction specialist Alexis Butcher. But what lifted this version out of the ordinary was the engraved crest for Walpole, probably for the celebrated Sir Robert Walpole 1676-1745 for Walpole-related silver of any form exerts its own special magic.
When this last went under the hammer in 1998 at Christie's it fetched £8500, a huge price which also established an auction record for a nutmeg grater.
At the Salisbury rooms it broke new ground again when the silver dealer Nicholas Shaw bid £11,500 to secure it.