: - "As it looks right now, we are going to be here again next
year," Linda Turner said on Thursday, August 7, the last day of
her three-day Riverside Antiques Show. "Here" is the Executive
Court Banquet Facility on South Willow Street in Manchester where
she moved her show after a long run at the armory downtown. To
accommodate her dealers, she followed the route taken by Frank
Gaglio ten years ago and arranged for a tent in the parking lot.
The banquet facility was air-conditioned and carpeted, the tent
fan-cooled and on blacktop. The tent was also on an uneven spot
in the parking lot and when one of the local storms broke shortly
after the opening on Tuesday evening, water rushed into the
exhibition area causing havoc for several of the dealers. S&H
Rugs of Fairlawn, N.J., dealer in Oriental rugs, quickly rolled
up or folded his inventory and made piles out of harm's way. Otto
Hart said that they were doing very well at the opening of the
show, but it all fell apart when water rushed into his booth. On
Thursday he noted, "If we do this show again next year, we will
bring pond boats." One of the dealers did not trust the weather
and from the first day on placed all of the furniture legs in
clay garden pot saucers. Mark Moody planned ahead and luckily had
his "legged" pieces up on blocks.
Rain as it did, for the most part it did not dampen the event.
People started lining up at both the tent and the banquet
facility at 3 pm on Tuesday, two hours before the 5-8 pm opening.
And they were there to buy. Mary Carden Quinn of Floral Park,
N.Y., was in the banquet facility and reported very good sales.
"It was excellent, a very strong opening, our best ever," Neil
Quinn said as he reeled off a number of sales including a blanket
chest, New England penny rug, broadside for a Lancaster shoe
store, several hog scrapper candlesticks, heart mat, fire mark,
horse doorstop, several hooked rug and a couple of mustard boxes.
Still hanging on the wall after the opening was a signed oil on
canvas by A.E. Kinney, a homestead said to be the residence of
Colonel Elder King of Windham, Conn. A child's wheelbarrow in
bittersweet over red was also shown, along with a covered sugar
bucket, iron banding and bail handle, ten inches in diameter at
the rim.
Corrine Burke of Ridgefield, Conn., returned to the show after a
brief absence and offered a chair table with round top in blue
paint, red surface base and a 12-drawer apothecary with wooden
knobs, Massachusetts origin, in old blue.
Also returning to the show was The Klassic Kace Antiques of
Manchester, N.H. Frank and Sharon Kace were one of the two
couples who started the Riverside Antiques Show and later sold it
to Linda Turner of Forbes and Turner Shows. After not exhibiting
for a couple of years they put their dealer hats back on and "had
a great show."
In fact hats were a major offering in their booth, with straw
hats, fire hats, hats molds and hat signs on display. Some of the
hat molds were sold, as was one of the fire hats, as well as
several trade signs, any number of smalls and a hanging field
cradle on a bentwood frame. The cradle was painted old gray with
gold decoration and red stripes. A three-slat child's rocker with
delicate finials was from the Eighteenth Century, all original
with a home-style cloth repair made to the splint seat, and a
portrait of the American Schooner Mary Anne was signed by
Pennsylvania folk painter A. Glazier. It was oil on breadboard
and measured 20 by 20 inches.
Dee Wilhelm Antiques from Grand Blanc, Wis., was set up in the
cafeteria area and offered a one-board tap table from the Hudson
River Valley, circa 1810-20, in old red stain with turned legs.
"That sure must have been some tree the top came from," Dee said,
pointing out the 32-inch width of the piece. An American
chandelier, New England, circa 1790 with the original surface
hung in the booth, and a four-drawer William and Mary/Queen Anne
chest of drawers was from Connecticut, circa 1730.
The Rathbun Gallery, Wakefield, R.I.
The other exhibitor in the cafeteria area was Windle's
Antiques, Wilmington, Del. Furniture offered included a Queen Anne
side chair from the Hudson River Valley, Spanish foot, circa
1780-1793, and a one-drawer stand from Maine, Nineteenth Century,
with a yellow, red and white paint history. A black duck was by
George Warin (1830-1904), a boat builder, circa 1880-90. "It has
been really very good for us," Herb Windle said, noting that sales
included several pieces of early lighting and some iron. A kettle
lamp of Pennsylvania origin was sold, along with four miniature
Betty lamps, including one by John Long of Lancaster, Penn.
Cutout and painted likenesses of Ben and Jerry, looking over the
shoulders of two kids eating ice cream, one from a carton the
other from a cone, was at the front of the booth of Dennis
Raleigh of Wiscasset, Maine. The piece was done about 20 years
ago by Harold French of Vermont and "it sure attracted lots of
attention," Dennis said.
Lana Smith of Louisville, Ky., showed a very nice Nineteenth
Century Sheraton blanket box with old blue painted surface,
paneled front and turned legs. It was shown in front of a log
cabin quilt, velvet and silk, in vibrant colors with a ruffle
around the edges.
Not only are the products of days gone by, but transportation and
places to visit are all brought back to memory through the many
posters displayed in the booth of Nancy Steinbock of Chestnut
Hill, Mass. One advertised the merits of The James Bicycle, while
another promised vegetables from Rice Seeds. The 1942 Dartmouth
Winter Carnival looked like a good place to be, and the New York
Central Lines encouraged people to travel New England.
A cigar store Indian figure, dating from the Nineteenth Century,
started out life in Illinois and came with Nicholas Domenick to
New Hampshire via Baden, Penn. Against the side wall of the booth
was an eight-leg Windsor settee in the original green paint with
floral and urn decoration on the back splat.
A red, white and blue painted figure of Uncle Sam stood in the
booth of Lynn Weaver of Wenham, Mass. The figure was
well-weathered and its original use was not listed. Furniture
included a Vermont sawbuck table with two-board scrubbed top, red
painted base, and a New York server in red paint, three drawers
over three doors.
Lillie Antiques of Wiscasset, Maine, offered a large tack box
that came from C.A. Borney Englenook Farm in Sumner, Maine. It
was in blue with red and yellow lettering. Among the pieces of
furniture was a one-drawer tap table with breadboard ends,
scrubbed top and red base, and a Connecticut River Valley blanket
chest on bracket feet, original red surface, circa 1700.
A pair of oversized metal mushrooms, 29 and 25 inches tall,
French origin, Nineteenth Century, in the original ivory
polychrome paint, was in the booth of Manchester Antiques,
Manchester, N.H. An Eighteenth Century cupboard with arched
front, original surface and brass hardware was among the
furniture shown, and a trio of handmade log calipers from New
England made an interesting display on one of the walls. One of
the calipers, of maple, was signed by J. Humphrey of Keene, N.H.,
1884.
Daniel and Karen Olson of Newburgh, N.Y., were having a "great"
show right from the start. "We have sold about eight pieces of
furniture and some smalls," Dan said on Wednesday, with one day
still to go. A coastal Virginia Chippendale secretary in birch
and yellow pine, circa 1730, was among the furniture sold, along
with a Sheraton secretary in mahogany, a ladder back armchair and
a set of drawers. Other pieces included a Queen Anne drop leaf
table from Rhode Island, circa 1770-1780, surrounded by five
fanback Windsor side chairs and one bow back Windsor, and a circa
1810 New England six-drawer chest, 36-inch case, with the
original brasses.
"I have had that piece for 47 years, the longest I have ever held
on to something," Richard Vandall of American Decorative Arts
said of his Shaker silo air vent. The vent was now serving as a
hanging lamp after he added a bulb and it proved to give just the
right light for over a table. A pair of swinging doors originally
served as the gateway to the Ladies and Gents Café, and the major
piece of furniture in the booth was a Enfield Shaker cupboard
with two doors over five drawers.
What gave the appearance of a large mouse head, galvanized,
peering down the aisle of the tent was, in reality, a rooster or
roof-top ventilator from a barn in New Hampshire.

Windle's Antiques, Centreville, Del.
"We wanted to show people that we really do have a variety of
things to offer," Francis Purcell of Philadelphia said. Known for
mantels, Francis and his son offered two this time, one of
Pennsylvania origin, circa 1800, with the original yellow painted
surface with red graining. The variety of objects in the booth
ranged from a Baltimore painted table, circa 1810, and a large sign
on the top of the booth advertising Soda Water, to a selection of
three pairs of andirons, all brass, one with finial tops.
"We had lots of people come up to us and say they liked this
location much better than the armory," Linda Turner said, "and as
of the moment we are planning to be back there again next year."
She says the tent might be moved to a different part of the
parking lot, where the runoff of water is not toward the tent,
but other than that things will stay pretty much the same.
As for the show's schedule, "That we are looking at and there may
be a shift in hours, but nothing more," she said. When questioned
about the value of staying open the third day for only four
hours, she replied, "It gives those people who come to New
Hampshire only for the dealer show a chance to shop Riverside as
well." She also pointed out that very often last minute sales are
made, this time citing John Gould who sold two pieces of
furniture during the last 15 minutes of the show.
Linda Turner bills the Riverside Antiques Show as a cornerstone
of Antiques Week in New Hampshire and this year strengthened that
position with the largest gate ever and some dealers with record
sales. That is what it is all about.