INTERIORS
WUNDER-CRAMMER
Ever
wondered how much you can squeeze into a petite end-of-terrace house where an
open fire is the sole source of heating? Well, here’s your answer. Furniture
restorer Guy Marshall’s mid-19th-century cottage in north Shropshire is all of
one room wide and two deep and yet he has still managed to accommodate an
abundance of mainly Georgian antiques, including a rather handsome four-poster.
Brimful, certainly; but it’s also beautifully – ahem – Marshalled
By Ros Byam
Shaw
Photography
by Jan Baldwin
15 November
2023
View of the
living room where a portrait of William Pitt hangs alongside a fireplace
Ten years
ago, in his early forties, antique furniture restorer Guy Marshall bought his
first house, an end-of-terrace cottage dating from 1850 in a quiet side street
of a town in north Shropshire. Plain and modest in size – its frontage to the
street is little more than three-and-a-half metres across – it fitted his
budget, and his three further requirements: ceilings high enough for his
chinoiserie long-case clock of 1705, a bedroom big enough for his 1800
four-poster bed, and a usable fireplace. Guy didn’t like much else about it.
The
double-glazed windows had to go, and he replaced them with single-glazed
multi-pane ones. Up came the fitted carpet that covered the concrete downstairs
and the chipboard upstairs. He disconnected all the radiators, including the
heated towel rail in the downstairs bathroom, and dismantled the fitted
kitchen. And he made a simple wooden chimney piece for the fireplace.
Tucked into
the corner, beside a mid-18th-century tea table, a faux-marble Solomonic
pedestal bears a plaster bust
To say the
house can accommodate a four-poster and a tall clock might give the wrong
impression. It really is as small as it looks from the outside. A side entrance
opens into a hall not much bigger than a chessboard. Steep stairs rise to the
left, the bathroom door to the right is firmly closed (he plans to rip out the
modern fittings) and ahead is the kitchen built over the old backyard. Through
an open doorway is the front room. At the top of the stairs another diminutive
landing separates a box room, which might better be described as a walk-in
cupboard, from the bedroom, which is entirely filled by the bed. That’s it.
After
moving in, Guy met a lady in her eighties who had been brought up here with her
parents and brother. The house had yet to be extended at the back. There was
one room downstairs, one upstairs and a privy in the backyard. Her father
worked as a cobbler in a windowless cellar below the living room. She cried to
see its transformation from the cramped slum dwelling of her childhood. Her
reaction is hardly surprising.
A painted-pine glazed cabinet houses a selection of 18th-century Leeds Pottery creamware and, on top, a toleware egg boiler. The cutlery tray in front is late Georgian
Inside this
humble shell Guy has created a world of old-fashioned beauty, such that
stepping through the front door is like opening a cardboard box to find it
lined with Spitalfields silk. The two tiny downstairs rooms, slightly hazy with
wood and hand-rolled cigarette smoke, are filled by a notably refined array of
furniture, paintings, prints, rugs, clocks and china, mostly 18th-century, some
rare, some damaged, all covetable.
Convenience
is secondary to aesthetics. The kitchen has been invaded and more or less edged
out of existence by a Georgian chest of drawers, a grandfather clock and a
serpentine sideboard. What you might call the business end has been shunted
into a corner, where it cowers behind a damask-covered screen: essentially a
Baby Belling cooker on top of a fridge, directly above which hang four
luminous, gilt-framed oil paintings.
Hidden by a
velvet-covered screen, Guy’s kitchen consists of just two appliances: a ‘Baby
Belling’ cooker – a present from a friend, the decorator Libby Lord – and a
fridge. Above them hang a country oak wall cupboard and a selection of oil
paintings
In the
adjoining living room two wing chairs loosely dressed in ticking face the
fireplace – now the only source of heat in the house – which is flanked by a
bureau and a bookcase. There are three tripod tables, four broad-seated dining
chairs, a cellarette, a padded stool, a bust on a fat marbled column and the
chinoiserie longcase, its top grazing the ceiling. A glazed corner cupboard is
stuffed with blue-and white pearlware, walls are closely hung, and the various
surfaces are arranged with a choice selection of Georgian china. Full, but not
cluttered.
Found in
pieces in a saleroom, the c1800 oak four-poster bed is now replete with
hangings made from old velvet curtains, as well as an 18th-century portrait of
a candlelit boy and a patchwork bedspread hand-stitched by Guy some 20 years
ago
Every
object, from a chaste creamware jug to a 1730 walnut chair with its unusually
fine ‘cresting’ (more like it can be seen at Chatsworth), is placed for
symmetry and balance, creating a rare feast for the eyes; rich without being
indigestible. In the room above, Guy demonstrates a sort of back flip across
the bed to reach the inlaid chest of drawers on its far side – edging round the
posts inevitably knocks a picture crooked. He bought the bed in pieces ‘tied up
with baler twine and covered in sheep muck’ and used antique velvet curtains to
form the hangings and canopy. He also made the bedspread, a patchwork in large
squares of old fabric. ‘I sewed that by hand, 16 hours a day for a week,’ he
says, ‘to keep myself busy when I stopped drinking.’ The quilt is a nightly
reminder of recovery.
A selection
of Georgian engravings and mezzotints lines the walls of the tight staircase.
With no space for fitted bookcases, this is made narrower still by the stacks
of books piled on the right of each tread. Glimpsed on a chest of drawers
through the bedroom door is a c1740 ebonised-pearwood bracket clock
‘I went
through a rough patch,’ he says, ‘living in a series of bedsits and rented
flats. I even lived on the road for a few years after I was expelled from
boarding school. I had a copy of the poems of WH Davies in my pocket and
thought it would be romantic.’ Although he rebelled as a pupil, it was his prep
school, situated in a grand Georgian country house with some of its contents
still in place, that sparked Guy’s love of antiques. ‘My father was in the
army, so we lived in quarters with hideous military furnishings. I started
buying antiques when I was 12.’ The habit remains, fed by Ebay and contacts in
the trade who appreciate his taste, craftsmanship and respect for patina. ‘Even
when I was homeless I needed a few nice things to lay out and look at – an old
lighter, an antique cigarette case, a netsuke I kept in my pocket. Physical
comfort has never been as important – another prep school legacy!’
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