Edward Holmes Baldock was a furniture
dealer and restorer known to operate
from premises in Hanway Street, London
from 1805. His business and
specialisation steadily expanded and in
1821 he was described in the Post Office
Directories as an ‘antique furniture and
ornamental china dealer’, this entry was
re-defined in 1826 to ‘buying, selling,
exchanging and valuing China, Cabinets,
Screens, Bronzes etc’. In addition to
restoring existing furniture, he also
produced designs for new pieces and had
them made to his specifications. One of
his commissions was to produce designs
for a suite of bedroom furniture in 1841
for the Duke
of Buccleuch. A design for a table in
the Buccleuch papers is annotated, ‘No.
3 Amboyna wood ground with coloured
flowers’ which is almost certainly the
preliminary sketch for a table which was
made later. He is known for a number of
well-constructed, and in certain cases,
finely inlaid pieces of furniture marked
with his initials, ‘EHB’. Some of these
pieces
were pastiches of 18th century French
furniture and others are executed in
contemporary English style.
Baldock’s bills survive in many
important archives including the Windsor
Royal Archives, George IV’s papers
1827-28, the Duke of Buccleuch and
Queensbury’s private archives and the
Duke of Northumberland’s private
archives amongst many others.