Archie, left and Joshua Steenburgh with the rare Boston bombe desk that sold for $605,000.
: One of the finest pieces of furniture to have crossed the auction
block over the course of this past year, a rare Boston-made bombe
desk with single-family history, surfaced unexpectedly in this
small New Hampshire town. The virtually untouched desk, sold at
Archie Steenburgh's auction on Tuesday, October 5, captured the
attention of all of the serious American furniture dealers and
collectors nationwide.
A huge crowd packed its way into the auction hall with every seat
in the building taken and people were standing three-deep around
the entire room. They were there, not only to watch the
impressive desk sell, but to also vie for a great selection of
fresh-to-the-market Americana, silver, dolls, vintage clothing
and ephemera. Steenburgh, as he was about to get the sale
underway, quipped to the amusement of all, that everyone was
"invited to come to our on sale Saturday featuring chamber pots
and commodes."
The first lot to be offered was a three-drawer miniature dresser
in original brown paint that was quickly knocked down at $1,320.
A small yellow Shaker wooden pail was next at $330, followed by
an exceptional Chinese export soup tureen and underplate that
brought $1,210.
It was not long before the crowd readied for the bombe desk to be
sold. Anticipation was high and three of Steenburgh's workers
positioned themselves in key locations on the stage where shaky
cell-phone reception seemed to be best.
The desk had come down through the family of prominent Boston
merchant and Revolutionary War figure John Rowe and passed
eventually to descendants in the Webster family.
"I have known about the desk for about 20 years," commented
Archie Steenburgh. "It belonged to Mrs Webster, a 98-year-old New
Hampshire woman who has been giving me good antiques to sell for
many years." The auctioneer commented that the desk came from her
unassuming residence, which he called an "unsuspecting little
bungalow."
The rare Boston bombe desk had descended through the family of prominent Boston merchant and Revolutionary War figure John Rowe and passed eventually to descendants in the Webster family. “I have known about the desk for about 20 years,” commented Archie Steenburgh. The auctioneer commented that the desk, which sold for $605,000, came from an unassuming residence, which he called an "unsuspecting little bungalow.”
While Archie had known about the desk for quite some period of
time, his son and co-auctioneer Joshua was floored when he saw
it. "I went into the living room and couldn't believe that
something this good had remained hidden all these years," he
said.
"We took it all apart," stated Archie, "went though it and
examined it, and even with our somewhat limited knowledge of how
true something is supposed to be, or should be, there didn't
appear to be anything wrong with it."
All who examined the desk concurred. The desk was in the
original finish and retained the original bold brasses and
authoritative side bale handles. It was repeatedly called "as close
to all original as it could be." Some minor repairs had been made
over the course of the last two centuries, such as the nuts being
replaced on the back of one of the brasses, but little of
consequence had been done that would affect the price.
The lot was accompanied by a copy of John Rowe's diary, edited by
Anne Rowe Cunningham and reprinted in 1903 by WB Clarke Co.
Specific chapters in the diary referred to John Rowe having dined
with John Hancock and George Washington; other chapters discussed
dealing with British troops invading his store. "The history is
just unbelievable," stated Joshua.
Family lore had the desk being made in Canada by John Rowe's
brother, a Loyalist, and later shipped back to the United States
when the families reunited. "I never try and dissuade people of
that age," stated the elder Steenburgh, but it was definitely a
Boston-made desk.
The desk was first put on display at Steenburgh's Labor Day
auction and word of it spread like wildfire. As the ads hit the
trade papers, calls from all over started coming into the gallery
from all the prominent dealers. "It got attention from everywhere
you would want it to," stated Johua, and the question of the day
was '"what are you estimating at?' I was underselling it," stated
Archie, "and when they asked I told everyone it was going to go
on the floor at $50,000 and that it would do what it would do."
The auctioneer later commented that he "honestly thought it was
going to sell between $200,000 and $300,000."
Archie Steenburgh hammers down the Cliff House sign for $945.
Bidding opened on the floor at $50,000 with a quick bid coming
from the rear of the room at $60,000. From there the desk took
off with several in the gallery getting in on the action.
Pennsylvania dealer Kelly Kinzle, standing on the front right
side of the room bid rapidly against two in the rear of the hall.
Bids progressed in $10,000 increments and moved quickly to the
$300,000 mark, where it stalled momentarily. At this point a
woman in the rear of the room stepped into view and hit the lot
with it bouncing back and forth till Kinzle dropped from the
action at $350,000.
Three phone bidders were poised as action slowed in the hall with
Woodbury dealer Wayne Pratt, New York City dealer Leigh Keno and
a Greenwich, Conn., private collector all bidding by telephone.
Pratt jumped into the fray and the piece was off and running
again. At $400,000, Steenburgh jumped the advances to $25,000,
and once again the tempo never slowed. Pratt said he "bid
strongly," but he came up short in the end as the Greenwich
collector took over. Final bids bounced back and forth between
the woman standing in the doorway at the rear of the auction hall
and the telephone with the Greenwich collector ultimately
claiming the lot at $605,000, including premium.
When told of the price the desk realized, Mrs Webster quipped,
"Well, when you said it was good, I knew it was good."
John Rowe's red painted leather fire bucket was also included in
the sale, but it was of no interest to the buyer of the desk with
it selling at $2,200 to a bidder in the room.

Lollipop-handled buck in blue, $770.
The remainder of the items in the auction came from two
estates with some of the stuff still coming from the McDonald
estate, items left over from the Labor Day auction, and also a
select group of items from an East Topsham, Vt., home.
Other items of interest included a nice cleaned Chippendale
chest-on-chest that sold at $8,800 to New Hampshire dealer George
Speicker of Fine Americana, a nice round-top chair table in a
gray-blue paint went out at $6,490, ands a classical mahogany
extension table with seven leaves realized $5,830.
A small group of Egyptian funeral urns from the McDonald estate
attracted a great deal of interest. The pieces were sold along
with a diary that discussed how they had been brought back to
this country in 1860 by a McDonald relative. Bidding on the lot
was brisk with it selling at $7,150.
A couple items that had come from Nantucket realized healthy
prices with a stereoview with 40-plus cards of Nantucket scenes
sold for a strong price of $2,860, and a very nice wooden bucket
with lollipop handle in great old blue over white paint brought
$770.
Dick Withington was active from his front row perch buying a
nicely decorated porcelain pitcher and bowl at $330, and a large
Staffordshire platter at $220.
Other items included a Chinese export bowl with tiger decoration
at $2,420, a banjo clock at $2,310 and two documents relating to
Fort Ticonderoga at $2,200.