It is a world in miniature which captures what the inside of an 18th century townhouse might have looked like.

With precise attention to detail, it is a dolls house which offers a unique insight into a period of time.

Now this rare surviving mid-18th century doll’s house is to go under the hammer at Lyon & Turnbull’s Edinburgh showroom next Thursday when bidding is due to start at £15,000.

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The Evans Baby House, part of the ‘Five Centuries: Furniture, Paintings & Works of Art’ auction is an amazing piece of social and cultural history showcasing 19th century interiors and tiny artefacts.

The Baby House, an earlier term for what became known as a doll’s house, was first documented in a book by Vivien Greene in 1955, reprinted in 1979, in which she recounts the fascinating history of The Evans Baby House. Ms Green, a notable authority on English dolls’ houses of the 18th and 19th centuries, was also the wife of novelist Graham Greene.

 

The Evans Dolls House will go under the hammer on February 24. Photo credit: Lyon & Turnbull.

The Evans Doll's House will go under the hammer on February 24. Photo credit: Lyon & Turnbull.

 

She wrote of this particular doll’s house: “This story of its recovery is in its miniature way as exciting and touching to read as any history of a real house bought back by its original owners after alienation…”

 

The Evans Dolls House will go under the hammer on February 24. Photo credit: Lyon & Turnbull.

The Evans Doll's House will go under the hammer on February 24. Photo credit: Lyon & Turnbull.

 

The house came into the ownership of the Evans family in Buckinghamshire in the early 19th century and was given to a female member, Anne, by a Miss Hancock,thought to be her godmother.

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Anne Evans, an English poet and composer, and her sibling Emma, were sisters of archaeologist, geologist and collector, Sir John Evans. Sir John went on to have a son, Sir Arthur Evans, their nephew, and the archaeologist best known for his excavation of the so-called Palace of Minos in 1900 and his discovery of the Minoan civilisation.

Anne’s sister Emma Hubbard, (née Evans), became the biographer of their doll’s house, detailing that some time later it was given to a younger member of the Hancock family, the original owners, and was never heard of again until 1886.

However, by remarkable coincidence, in January of that year, Emma visited the Evelina Hospital for children in London and happened to see and identify the house, buying it back for a donation of four guineas in 1890.

 

The Evans Dolls House will go under the hammer on February 24. Photo by Stewart Attwood.

The Evans Doll's House will go under the hammer on February 24. Photo by Stewart Attwood.

 

After 'rescuing' the Baby House, Emma set about renovating it. A special feature from this era being miniature framed photographs depicting members of the Evans and Hubbard families, which hang in the first-floor drawing room.

The original tinted prints in the upper and middle floors were retained, one of which depicts the Gothic tower at Whitton Park, Middlesex, as well as a small sepia drawing by her father.

 

The Evans Dolls House will go under the hammer on February 24. Photo credit: Lyon & Turnbull.

The Evans Doll's House will go under the hammer on February 24. Photo credit: Lyon & Turnbull.

 

It’s thought that Emma sourced some of the current furniture, which includes a lovely little chest of drawers on the ground floor, 19th century bedroom furniture and an earthenware dinner set, complete with original box. Later additions include the children in the nursery and a male doll which Emma described as having ‘mutton-chop whiskers.’

Emma is believed to have passed the doll’s house to her brother, Sir John, and through him by descent to his daughter, granddaughter and great-granddaughter, the late Mary Harley (née Weir). Mary (1925-2019) was brought up in rural Suffolk and educated at the Universities of St Andrews and Oxford.

Theo Burrell, the specialist at Lyon & Turnbull responsible for the sale said: “This is an exceptional doll’s house that tells a terrific story. Not only was it in the hands of a distinguished family, the amazing record of its existence and its rediscovery makes it a sought-after piece. It’s absolutely enchanting and I know it will continue to give great pleasure to future generations.”