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Diamond Jubilee Rocking Horse

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Diamond Jubilee Rocking Horse

Sale price
$13,800.00
Regular price
$13,800.00
  • Shipping Charged Separately
  • Limited Edition: 60
  • Suitable Ages: All Ages
  • Dimensions: 56" L x 18" W x 48" H
  • Bespoke: 8-10 weeks
  • Size: Oversized Item
View our Gift Wrapping options here.
Quantity must be 1 or more

This horse is made with English oak and has a surprise secret compartment in the rear containing 9 mounted photographs of Her Majesty The Queen wrapped in a leather pouch along with many other unique features.

Description More to the Story Dimensions Safety & Care Shipping & Customizations

Description

Sir Winston Churchill was in the 4th Hussars in the Abyssinia campaign in 1915. Made in English oak with a surprise secret compartment in the rear of the horse containing 9 mounted photographs of Her Majesty The Queen wrapped in a leather pouch. The special Military saddle and tack is based on that of the 4th Hussars complete with bedroll. The Shabraq is beautifully hand embroidered with the regimental crest and edged in gold and the EiiR cypher. The runners are inlaid with a pair of Churchill crowns given to Marc and Tony by their Uncle James Bosworthick, who taught them to make horses in 1982. Mounted in the base are 3 miniature lead figures of Winston Churchill and a solid silver numbered plaque. This rocking horse is a Limited Edition with just 60 available.

Mounted on a Victorian safety stand, designed in 1878 by PJ Marqua of Cincinnati, Ohio, the horse comes complete with a real horse hair mane and tail and hallmarked brass plaque bearing the makers name, date and unique number.

Available to discerning owners, this unique, heirloom quality rocking horse is an investment in authentic English craftsmanship from the most highly regarded makers in the field. Beautiful in any setting, this truly timeless piece of equine sculpture is rideable by children of all ages. 

Green Policy: Working with hardwoods brings with it an environmental responsibility, which the brothers honor whenever possible, timbers are bought from suppliers supporting the code of conduct of the International Tropical Timber Organizations. The timber used by Stevenson Brothers comes from plantations with a sound replanting policy.

More to the Story

Though small clay horses on wheels have been discovered in graves from as early as 1200 B.C. (perhaps for budding knights to practice their jousting skills), the first toy horse that could be ridden was the hobby, or stick, horse that dates to Greek and Roman times. One story has it that Socrates himself, frolicking with his young sons, was spotted cantering about on a pole adorned by a horse head.

The craftsman who first placed a wooden horse on rockers—a likely outgrowth of the cradle—is unknown, but by the end of the 18th century, rocking horses had evolved into ornately crafted, fiery chargers at full gallop, heads outstretched, horsehair manes and tails flowing, glass eyes gleaming. Queen Victoria’s nine children insisted on bringing a dapple-gray on family vacations. Napoléon’s young son, Joseph-Charles-François, treasured his painted pony. Sweden’s King Karl XV and King Prajadhipok of Thailand rode rocking horses in their youth (as did the current heir to the British throne, Prince Charles, on a model carefully selected for him by Queen Elizabeth II).

For a long time, rocking horses were the purview of the rich. Then, with the increasing prosperity brought on by the Industrial Revolution, they became nursery fixtures of children born to an emerging middle class. There have been many permutations. In Germany, wooden and papier-mâché horse frames were often covered with calfskin. In bicycle-crazed France, velocipede rockers—wooden horses mounted on tricycles—were all the rage. Inventive Victorian manufacturers made horses with multiple seats to accommodate up to three children at a time, a model the Stevenson brothers have revived. In the United States, toymakers fashioned complicated if failure-prone spring-loaded horses that approximated a trotting motion.

Americans also produced some of the more flamboyant designs, adopting the style of carousel horses popular at fairgrounds and carnivals. An American also scored a safety breakthrough: in 1878, to guard against horse and rider going head over heels, not to mention scratching floors, bumping into furniture or squashing small fingers and toes, Philip Marqua of Cincinnati patented a safety stand to which the horse’s legs are attached. (Purists, of course, disdain the stands.)

As immigrants poured into this country throughout the 19th century, craftsmen arriving from every corner of Europe applied their talents to America’s rocking horses. Dozens of workshops, many of which employed Old World artisans, sprang up between the 1850s and the turn of the century. (The young Dwight Eisenhower earned pocket money sanding rocking horses at a now-defunct shop in Abilene, Kansas.) Few of these studios endured, in part because skilled wood-carvers flocked to the more lucrative market in carousel horses. One rocking horse manufacturer from that era, the Whitney Reed Corporation of Leominster, Massachusetts, survived for nearly 100 years, only to succumb in the 1950s to postwar parents’ preference for such trendy playthings as hula hoops and Betsy Wetsy dolls.

Dimensions

- Large: 56" L x 18" W x 48" H 

  • holds up to 250 lbs

Safety & Care

- This rocking horse is made from English Oak.

- Please adhere to weight limits and ensure ample space around the horse when riding to avoid excessive wear or damage.

Shipping & Customizations

Due to the size and the ability to customize, this item will take up to 10 weeks to ship to you. Because this item is tailored for you we charge separately for shipping and will reach out to you to receive additional shipping information.

As with all of Stevenson Brothers' rocking horses, you also have the ability to custom build your very own horse: choose between the standard safety stand or the coach spring base, the type of wood carved, the type of stand your horse is mounted on, the fittings, whether or not and/or how you want your horse painted, and the colors of the leather saddle and suede saddle blanket. In addition, you can choose to include a secret locking compartment and inscribe your very own message on the included plaque. To discuss all of your options, please contact us directly at +1 610-649-2909.

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