Portrait of Sir James Fortescue Flannery; Portrait of Lady Flannery
a near pair, the latter signed and dated 'H Jamyn Brooks/1912' (lower left); inscribed 'H J BROOKS' (on the upper stretcher bar verso); further inscribed 'Artist/ H Jamyn Brooks/ The Savage Club/ Adelphi Terrace WC/ Title lady Flannery' (on an old label attached to the stretcher)
each oil on canvas
one 239 x 147cm, 242 x 152cm
(4)
Estimate: | £1,000 - £2,000 |
Hammer price: | £1,800 |
together with the Bestowel Vellum Baronet and Grant of Arms, signed by Sir Alfred Scott-Gatty (Garter) and George Edward Cokayne (Clarenceaux), dated 22nd December 1904, both held in the original cases
Footnote
Flannery had a remarkably varied career, working as an
engineer, naval architect and later both a Liberal Unionist and Conservative
politician. Born in Liverpool, son of
John Flannery who captained the John MacVicar ship which regularly sailed
between Liverpool and Sydney, Flannery was educated at the Liverpool College of
Science before attending Victoria University in Manchester, which had been
established by Royal Charter in 1880.
Following his graduation, Flannery worked as an apprentice at the Britannia
engineering firm in Birkenhead, where he won the Derby prize, competed for by
engineering students in Liverpool. He
furthered his experience under Sir Edward Reid who later became Chief
Constructor for the Royal Navy. He then
founded the marine engineering firm Flannery, Baggally & Johnson which
would go on to hold offices in London, Liverpool and Rotterdam. Flannery was President of the Railway Clerks
association between 1900-1906, President of the Institute of Marine Engineers
in 1914 and, in 1931, President of the Society of Consulting Engineers and a director of Barclays Bank. He was appointed Justice of the Peace on two
occasions, for Surrey in 1892 and for Kent in 1895 and first stood for
parliament in 1895, winning the seat of Shipley, West Yorkshire, which he held
until the 1906 general election. By the
1910 he had joined the Conservative party and returned to parliament as MP for
Maldon in Essex, a seat which he retained in the 1923 election.
Flannery was knighted in 1899 and created 1st
Baronet of Wethersfield Manor, Esssex in 1904.
In 1882 he married Edith Mary Emma Jenkyn of Ealing (b.1857) and their
son, Harold was born the following year.
They went on to have two daughters, Kathleen Edith and Enid Fortescue. On 8th July 1916 Enid married 2nd
Lt. David Crawford Moore Lindsay, grandparents of the present owners.
Henry
Jamyn Brooks was a London-based portrait painter who recorded a number of
highly significant events during his career.
In 1888 he painted ‘The Private View of the Old Masters Exhibition at
the Royal Academy’, featuring no less than sixty-six people including such
luminaries as Millais, Holman Hunt, Alma-Tadema, Burne-Jones as well as Alfred
de Rothschild and Prime Minister William Gladstone. Brooks also included critic John Ruskin even
though he did not attend the event and the finished work was donated to the
National Portrait Gallery in 1919. He
received a couple of Royal commissions including ‘Queen Victoria at the
reception for county councils and mayors’, an event which formed part of her
Diamond Jubilee celebrations, as well as ‘Queen Victoria’s Last Ceremony’
depicting her receiving Lord Roberts following his return from Africa.