Great 120+ Year Old 19th Century All Wood Dome Top Antique Trunk in a Rich Medium Cherry Finish and Manufactured by the Famous "SHR & Co." with the Tasmanian Devil Trademark! Canvas Handles are From the Distant Past But Most Likely Not Original. Trunk has a Non-working Lock with Front Latches Having Plenty of Tension and Spring to Them. What is MOST Unique is the Original Hidden Compartment in the Lid, Original Lift Out Tray and the FANTASTIC professionally sealed Victorian Lithographs found on the Lid Compartment Door and on the Lift Out Tray! One of Them is of a Young Boy Launching a Toy Boat While Two Young Girls Watch, and the Second is of Two Young Girls and Their Dog Playing with an Angry Swan. These Chromolithographs are Incredibly Detailed. |
![]() Click Photo! |
28"L x 16"D x 21"H This a a great antique trunk for someone who especially enjoys and appreciates the "Victorian Era" as seen by the lithographs. A nice and tight, solid, well built trunk will give years of pleasure. This trunk is in perfect museum quality/investment grade condition and even the leather and cloth tabs found on the lid compartment and on the lift out tray have survived intact. |
Sold! |
540 659 6209 |
Custom Designed, Handcrafted, and Hand Lettered in Caligraphy on your Antique Chest |
![]() Click Here To Review Sample Engravings |
|
Customer Photographic Examples of our Antique Trunks Being used as a Military or Naval Retirement Shadow Box and Storage Chest!! |
![]() Click Here for Sample Shadow Box Photographs From Customers |
|
Note the Flatop and Two Monitor or Waterfall Trunks, Each Being Individually Unique at the Very Time of Production. |
![]() Click Photo For Larger View and More Historical Information! |
We all romanticize about the mystique of these antique trunks. The possible owners and travels that each steamer trunk has taken, along with the high level of detailed craftsmanship in the original production of each and every steamer trunk with that individualized character giving both intrinsic and non-intrinsic value. |
It was a common practice that loyal and productive craftsmen would be allowed to bring their children to work with them to learn a craft, so many of the children in this photograph were more than likely sons of the men shown. |
Copy of Photo On Request With Every Trunk Purchase |