Rarely seen royal treasure goes on sale for first time in 180 years | Royal | News

A “Running” Puset “used by Queen Victoria for her children and grandchildren 180 years ago is ready to auction. At the end of the 19th century, the piece is defined as the “fun spirit of the Victorian era and the private world of the royal family”.
A child designed to look like a horse -drawn car contains a pair of dappled toy horse running up and down when the concert is pushed. Famous toy constructors George and Joseph Lines thought to have been made by the piece, “the success of making toys at the end of the 19th century” was described as.
Puset, Victoria’s summer residence on the island of Wight at Osborne House, the queen will be withdrawn every year for a more comfortable life than the court with her children and grandchildren.
The housing was a special place for the Late Queen, which was purchased by Prince Albert in 1845.
Throughout his reign, Victoria usually withdrawn to Osborne House for a more comfortable life than the court, and raised her children there, so strollers are hosting there.
Oborne House is the place where she died in 1901 and spent her last days there.
A photo at the Royal Collection in 1899 is playing in a similar concert outside a hut on the Windsor terrain of Victoria’s great grandchildren ‘David’ – the future Edward VIII – and then George VI.
Puset, which is expected to buy between £ 1,200 and £ 1,800, is preparing to auction for Woolley and Wallis’s furniture, artworks extending between 1-2 October and clock sales.
Woolley and Wallis Furniture Specialist Mark Yuan Richards said: “This rare Puset collectors and fans of royal history offer a remarkable opportunity to obtain an object owned by Queen Victoria.
“We embody the fun spirit of the Victorian period and the private world of the royal family, and therefore we are very interested in England and abroad.”




