You searched for parts within a set, National Trust Inventory Number: “31795

Show me:
and
Clear all filters

  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • 49 items Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Explore

Select a time period

Or choose a specific year

Clear all filters

Ellen Nicolls (née Worsey) (Stafford 1788 – Stone 1815) and her daughter Sarah Nicolls, later Trafford, later Joule (Stone 1809 - Stone 1848)

attributed to Ramsay Richard Reinagle, RA (London 1775 – Chelsea 1862)

Category

Art / Oil paintings

Date

c. 1814

Materials

Oil on canvas

Measurements

2410 x 1500 mm

Place of origin

England

Order this image

Collection

Dinefwr, Carmarthenshire

NT 869210

Summary

Oil painting on canvas, Ellen Nicolls (née Worsey) (Stafford 1788 – Stone 1815) and her daughter Sarah Nicolls, later Trafford, later Joule (Stone 1809 - Stone 1848), attributed to Ramsay Richard Reinagle, RA (London 1775 – Chelsea 1862), circa 1814. A full-length portrait of a lady in a white dress, in an exterior with a child sitting at left, on a balustrade. A pair with NT 869211, a portrait of Edward Trafford Trafford (Liverpool 1783 – Stone 1839) husband and father of the present sitters. The family seat was at Swithamley (now spelled Swythamley), Staffordshire.

Provenance

Presumably commissioned by Edward Trafford Nicolls, later Edward Trafford Trafford (1783-1839); thence by descent to Sarah Joule (1809-48), his daughter, see National Archives, PROB 11/1930/55, will of Edward Trafford Trafford, 15 February 1839, '2 large portraits of himself and his wife [left] to his daughter, Sarah Joule'; Ellen Wynne (died 1896), daughter of Sarah Joule, see Staffordshire Record Office, 4974/B/5/8, letter from Mabella Worsey (second wife of Edward Trafford Trafford) to Philip Brocklehurst of Swythamley Hall, 2 December 1872, 'Yes there is a full length Oil Painting of Mr Trafford, taken in his Shooting Costume, Dog, Gun etc at his granddaughter Mrs Wynn’s [sic] Field House near Stone.'; Thomas Trafford Wynne (son of Ellen Wynne); William Watkin Wynne; Ellen Margaret Wynne Newton (1905-92); bequeathed to the National Trust by the estate of Margaret Newton, 1994.

Makers and roles

attributed to Ramsay Richard Reinagle, RA (London 1775 – Chelsea 1862), artist previously catalogued as attributed to Philip Reinagle RA (Scotland 1749 – Chelsea 1833), artist

View more details