Online Encyclopedia

ROBERT GILLOW (d. 1773)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 23 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ROBERT GILLOW (d. 1773)  , the founder at Lancaster of a distinguished
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firm of
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English
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cabinet-makers and furniture designers whose books begin in 1731 . He was succeeded by his eldest son Richard (1734-1811), who after being educated at the
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Roman Catholic seminary at
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Douai was taken into partnership about 1757, when the firm became Gillow & Barton, and his younger sons Robert and Thomas, and the business was continued by his grandson Richard (1778-1866) . In its early days the firm of Gillow were architects as well as cabinet-makers, and the first Richard Gillow designed the classical Custom House at Lancaster . In the
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middle of the 18th century the business was extended to
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London, and about 1761 premises were opened in Oxford Street on a site which was continuously occupied until 1906 . For a long period the Gillows were the best-known makers of English furniture—Sheraton and Heppelwhite both designed for them, and replicas are still made of pieces from the drawings of Robert Adam . Between 176o and 1770 they invented the
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original form of the billiard-table; they were the patentees (about 1800) of the telescopic dining-table which has long been universal in English houses; for a Captain Davenport they made, if they did not invent, the first writing-table of that name . Their vogue ,is indicated by references to them in the
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works of Jane Austen, Thackeray and the first Lord Lytton, and more recently in one of Gilbert and Sullivan's comic operas .

End of Article: ROBERT GILLOW (d. 1773)
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