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Mustard pot
GB 2014 WS-04-TRO-001/069 · Unidad documental simple · 1820
Parte de Westminster School's Archive and Collections

A George III silver mustard pot on three feet, embossed with a border of flowers on foliate and paw feet, blue glass liner. Maker's mark obscured.

GB 2014 WS-04-CLO-05 · Unidad documental simple · Late 18th Century
Parte de Westminster School's Archive and Collections

Mahogany case with rocaille gilt brass mounts, painted dial signed within rocaille mask spandrels, subsidiary dials to the lower spandrels - Musica/Silence and Minuet/Dance/Hornpipe/Gavot, the arch with a painted automaton vignette of a harbour scene, eight day movement with a cylinder action carillon of ten bells, twin pull chord repeats.

Sin título
Mrs. Charlotte Du Brieux
GB 2014 WS-03-PIC-001/11 · Unidad documental simple · 19th Century
Parte de Westminster School's Archive and Collections

Miniature of Mrs. Charlotte Du Brieux

Kept "Mother du Brieux's" Boarding House at No1. Dean's Yard. Formerly Mrs (Driffield) but subsequently married the Chevalier du Brieux ...

Mother Grant III by James Warren Childe
GB 2014 WS-03-PIC-001/91 · Unidad documental simple · Early 19th Century
Parte de Westminster School's Archive and Collections

Miniature on bone or ivory; half-length portrait of a young woman, turned to the right; she wears a white dress and a red wrap; her hair is brown and curly. Inscription on back by Lawrence Tanner: 'This is a member of the Grant family of Westminster School ? 1967'

Sin título
Monos
GB 2014 WS-02-POS-01-12 · Unidad documental simple · c.1911
Parte de Westminster School's Archive and Collections

One copy annotated on reverse by R.S. Chalk, as follows:
'At close of School, following ‘Ire licet’, a School Monitor (in charge of the Door, ‘ostium’) and a Second Election KS capping the Masters. (The junior Master descending amid the IV Form was taken in my day to be W.G. Etheridge, but at this date I think it more likely A.H. Forbes).
As a Second Election from Play 1921 to Election 1922 I regularly performed my duty as Monos- tapping on the doors of VII and VI Form Rooms with the corner of my college-cap and announcing “Instat Quinta!” or (when Early School in Summer) “Instat Quarta!” –and on Saturdays or Plays “Instat Sesquiduodecima!” (This was an anachronism, this no longer being the correct hour).
Only once or twice (on O.T.C Field Days) did it fall to me to deputise for a School Monitor and take charge of the Door and take my place on the Monos Stone.'