:A World War II airfield in the part of England known as Robin
Hood's legendary home has become one of the largest antiques
markets in the country, indeed, in all of Europe. The most recent
gathering, April 4-5, featured more than 2,000 exhibitors dealing
in antiques and vintage collectibles.
Swinderby Air Field, Newark, Nottinghamshire, is about 100 miles
north of London in an area of gently rolling hills with farm
animals and new housing subdivisions as neighbors. Six times each
year Arthur Swallow Fairs arranges for the site to be the
three-day home and shop for the 2,000 businesses, with more than
4,000 workers offering to sell their collections that they have
gathered from throughout the United Kingdom, Ireland and some of
the nearby northern European countries. In fact, the very first
dealer on the line was from the Netherlands, with an 18-wheel
truck and trailer loaded with household furnishings and furniture
for the fair.
Dealers line up as early as Sunday night for the organized
release to the selling areas on Monday at 11:30 am, or as show
owner/manager Peter Burgoin said, "half eleven." As far as
Burgoin knows, there is no such person as Arthur Swallow. He
began this show 11 years ago as an alternative to dmg world
media's nearby Newark Antiques Fair. At the time, he figured it
would "be 'ard ta swallow," and thus he and his wife, Heather,
came up with the name. Burgoin said there are many who still
think his name is Arthur and he is so used to it, he does not
correct anyone.
The first fair had 56 dealers selling on a part of the airfield
that has subsequently become a housing development. As the bigger
Newark Antiques fair had chosen to schedule dealer setup on
Sunday with Monday and Tuesday as selling days, Swinderby was
selling on Saturday and Sunday. Last year dmg changed its date
pattern to Thursday through Saturday, so in December Burgoin
announced the change of Swinderby's pattern to a Monday setup
with Tuesday and Wednesday as selling days.
Clair Fuller, Horncastle
Just as with the Newark Fair, Swinderby is conducted six
times each year on the days immediately preceding the dmg event.
Offerings at this affair are diverse, with antiques from the
Fifteenth Century all the way forward to the mid-1950s Modern,
and there are some reproductions allowed in pine furniture and
ornamental cast metal furniture for the garden. Large,
semipermanent tents were the first to fill up, as the dealers in
the four interconnected units were generally offering small
antiques, which they brought with a few trips on push carts,
dollies and hand trucks. Christine Laurence from the Needham
market in Suffolk was offering dishes. Her collection had English
porcelain from the last three centuries and also some from China
and France. Laurence's collection was especially strong in Royal
Doulton and Spode dishes, but she also offered some silver and
silver plate.
Just a short distance away was a dealer who when asked if the
merchandise was his silver, promptly replied, "I have no silver."
When pressed, he said "this is plate," meaning silver
plate, post-1845. The English are very specific on three words or
terms to describe articles make containing silver. Old Sheffield,
or Sheffield plate, is the silver bonded to copper made from
about 1740 to 1845. Sterling refers to articles made of silver
with 925 parts per 1,000 silver or more, which has been available
since the Seventeenth Century and plate is electroplated nickel
silver made after 1845. In any case, the dealer was filling three
tables with his wife's extensive collection of silver pieces for
the dining table.
Nautical navigation and engineering equipment were the motif of
the next booth in the tent. Green from Shropshire was offering
shelves filled with pewter articles. There were tankards,
graduated measure sets plates and platters. Frank Goddard,
Doncaster, has been a collector of radios for most of his life.
He said his inventory with dozens from which to choose were all
in good service, for he restores them to working order and when
necessary fixes the cases as well.

Mickey O'Mara, Portsmouth
The tents were on one old runway of this inactive airport,
which met another at right angles with a third beginning at the
same junction and bisecting that right angle. This intermediate
runway was filled with dealers in their own tents. They are regular
vendors and some of the tents are erected by contractors in advance
of the show so that dealers can unload quickly. Jeff Young from
Sterling, Scotland, said he obtains most of his merchandise on
house calls near home. This gives him great variety in his
collection, which this time included some porcelain dishes,
furniture and what he identified as a Tibetan thangka. This small
textile, about 18 inches wide by 30 inches long, was a depiction of
the wheel of life, he said.
Kickshaws Antiques had two tables filled with early door
hardware. From Essex, the hardware included thumb latches in iron
from the Sixteenth Century. The Lampman, Boston, which is about
40 miles away, specializes in glass oil lamps from the Nineteenth
Century. All its lamps are ready to use, and a selection of
shades are offered for many of them. There was also a vast array
of chimneys for replacements.
In one of these tents, there was a large collection of furniture,
mostly Georgian. A.T. Ballantine, Lytham St Anne's in
Lincolnshire, was offering a bachelor's chest for the equivalent
of about $1,200. The chest was in excellent original condition
and it sold on the first day. A Sheraton sideboard, mahogany
veneer on oak and pine underwood, was available from Donna
Fernyhough from Tamworth, Staffordshire, for $787. She also had a
set of Art Nouveau chairs, eight in all, which she identified as
Thonet from the Viennese furniture maker of the last half of the
Nineteenth Century.

Caroline Rowan, South Wales
A worktable was found in an unstaffed booth with a price tag
reading $165, and that was without asking for the best. Clegg and
Johnson were filling a double-sized tent with furniture from the
Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. There was a tent filled with
old maple workbenches and four-wheeled garden carts. The
workbenches were selling in quantity at $227 each and the carts for
$100. Mickey O'Mara from Portsmouth was selling another big load of
furniture, including a Georgian lowboy in original finish for under
$1,000. Ian Warner said he has "sent many loads to America from my
big barn in Kidderminster." Among the pieces of furniture at this
show he was offering a monk's bench in elm, circa 1750, with
intricate carvings for $460.
One runway was for "casuals," which are dealers who simply line
up when the weather forecast strikes them as being favorable.
They have no commitment prior to the show, so they pay upon
arrival for their space. One such dealer, Nick Major from Bolling
Brook, had a stone surround from a very early church window -
Fifteenth Century, he said - on his trailer. The price was $1,225
and he had three more at home for the same price.
Prices quoted have been converted from British pounds to US
dollars.
The fair is largely an outdoor affair with tents both large and
small housing the dealers. It should be added, however, that rain
in England, while frequent, is usually light and not long
lasting. The English have a habit of dealing with the rain and
simply carrying on in spite of it. That said, the December and
February shows are the smallest, while summer dates can reach as
many as 4,000 exhibitors.
The next outing will be May 30-31, then August 1-2. For
information, www.arthurswallowfairs.co.uk or +44(0) 1298 27493.