Early 19th Century Painting Captain John Cooke’s Family Group Portrait of Louisa Cooke’s Three Daughters (c.1833) Subject & Medium Circle of William Egley (1798–1870), English School Watercolour and gouache on paper laid on panel. An exceptionally refined family portrait showing the three daughters of Louisa Charlotte Devonsher (née Cooke, 1797–1871), the only child of Captain John Cooke, RN, one of the two British captains killed at the Battle of Trafalgar. Almost certainly painted for the family home, Donhead Lodge, Donhead St Andrew, Wiltshire, it is both an intimate record of domestic affection and a visual monument to one of Britain’s great naval heroes. Composition & Technique The three girls are gracefully arranged around a richly carved mahogany scroll-back sofa upholstered in rose-crimson damask, their poses forming a harmonious triangular composition. The youngest child, about three years old, sits at the centre on the sofa cushion, her rounded features and deeper cornflower-blue gown suggesting tender youth and spontaneity. To the left, a sister of nine or ten sits demurely, hands folded in her lap, her dress a paler sky-blue; to the right, the eldest (around eleven or twelve) stands easily but proudly at the sofa arm in a more saturated periwinkle tone, her posture quietly authoritative. All three wear pale blue silk gowns trimmed with fine white lace. The two elder sisters are adorned with blue ribbon chokers bearing small gold lockets and coral bead bracelets, while the youngest, unadorned, embodies the ideal of unspoiled childhood. Each girl holds a blush-pink rose, petals shaded from shell pink to soft carmine; these roses echo the crimson upholstery and rhythmically tie the colour scheme together. Executed in transparent watercolour with delicate gouache heightening, the artist has modelled the faces with translucent pinks and warm ochres, the hair in chestnut and golden curls. The neutral brown-grey ground is almost abstract in its simplicity, pushing the figures gently forward and bathing them in a soft, natural light. The handling is confident yet restrained – a textbook example of the English provincial watercolour school at the transition from the late Regency to the early Victorian period. About the Sitters & Captain Cooke The sitters are identified as the three daughters of Louisa Charlotte Devonsher (née Cooke) and her husband Abraham Devonsher of Cheltenham: Louisa Cornelia Devonsher (b. c.1822; later Mrs Edward Helsham) Augusta Sarah Devonsher (b. c.1823; later Mrs Edward Rolles) Sophia Margaret Devonsher (b. c.1830; later Mrs Robert Dwarris Gibney) Through their mother, these girls were the granddaughters and only direct descendants of Captain John Cooke, RN (1762–1805) and his wife Louisa Hardy (1764–1853). Born in Devon to a family of landowners and shipowners, John Cooke entered the navy under the patronage of Sir Alexander Hood and was educated at Mr Braken’s Naval Academy, Greenwich. He saw service in the American War of Independence (including the Battles of Rhode Island and the Saintes), and in the French Revolutionary Wars commanded the frigates HMS Nymphe and HMS Amethyst. In 1805 he was appointed to the 74-gun HMS Bellerophon. At Trafalgar, on 21 October 1805, Cooke fought a fierce close-quarters action with the French Aigle and was mortally wounded by musket fire. He reputedly gave the defiant order “Don’t strike the colours” as he fell – a phrase that passed into naval legend. When his body was searched, an unsent letter was found in his pocket, affectionately mentioning his young daughter Louisa Charlotte and the family dog, Mr Quiz – a fragment of domestic tenderness preserved amid the carnage of battle. In recognition of his sacrifice, Lloyd’s Patriotic Fund presented his widow Louisa Hardy Cooke with a large silver vase and a pension of £200 per annum, while Louisa Charlotte received a gold medal and a pension of £50 per annum. Louisa Charlotte later settled in Cheltenham, dying there in 1871. In the following generation, her granddaughter Caroline Augusta Rolles donated Captain Cooke’s Trafalgar gold medal and silver vase to the nation, ensuring his public commemoration. This portrait of Louisa Charlotte’s three daughters forms the private, domestic counterpart to those public honours – the living embodiment of the line for which Cooke gave his life. Historical Significance This work is historically important on several levels: It is a rare, fully documented image of Trafalgar’s next generation – the granddaughters of a named captain, shown in their family environment at Donhead Lodge in Wiltshire. It embodies the shift in early nineteenth-century British culture from public heroism to private virtue: the hero’s courage at sea balanced by the moral, domestic calm of his descendants at home. with its direct connection to Lloyd’s Patriotic Fund awards and to the later donation of the family’s Trafalgar relics, the picture acts as a visual bridge between battlefield, commemoration and family memory. For collectors of maritime history, Trafalgar material, or important British family portraits, this is not just decorative art but a primary visual document of naval heritage. About the Artist – Circle of William Egley Although apparently unsigned, the portrait’s refined draughtsmanship and sentiment place it confidently within the Circle of William Egley (1798–1870). Egley, a London-born painter, exhibited regularly at the Royal Academy and British Institution and was widely admired for his intimate watercolour group portraits of children and family life. The present work displays all the hallmarks associated with Egley’s circle: the carefully balanced triangular grouping of figures; the harmonious interplay of blue dresses and crimson upholstery; a neutral, uncluttered background free from distracting detail; and the subtle blend of natural observation and gentle sentiment that characterises early-Victorian domestic portraiture. While prudently catalogued as “Circle of William Egley”, the quality of handling and compositional sophistication place it at a high level within that orbit. Signed Apparently unsigned on the visible surface; offered as Circle of William Egley on compelling stylistic grounds. Framed The work has been recently and professionally reframed to museum-show standard: a Larson Juhl classic distressed gilt frame gives a period-sympathetic yet crisp presentation with subtle patination; the picture is glazed with AR70 low-reflection protective glass, greatly reducing glare and offering enhanced protection for this important work on paper. A new internal deep black mount with a fine gold border throws the image forward and beautifully complements the blues of the dresses and the warm reds of the upholstery. Ready to hang straight into a serious collection. Dimensions (framed) Width: 42 cm Height: 38 cm Depth: 2.5 cm A well-proportioned piece with strong presence, ideal for a feature wall, study, library or drawing room. Provenance By family descent and distinguished collections: Louisa Hardy Cooke, widow of Captain John Cooke, RN → Louisa Charlotte Devonsher (née Cooke) → Thence by descent within the Cooke–Devonsher–Rolles family until c.1961–62 → Private Collection of Trafalgar Relics, associated with notable London auction house → Cheshire Antiques Consultant LTD Exhibited: Famous Lord Hill Museum Such a clear chain, anchored in the family of a named Trafalgar captain, is unusually strong for a portrait of this period. Why You’ll Love It A beautifully coloured, exquisitely detailed children’s group that lights up any room. Direct and well-documented link to Captain John Cooke, RN, fallen hero of Trafalgar, and to the family home Donhead Lodge. An evocative synthesis of naval history, Regency–Victorian domestic life and English watercolour artistry. Attributable to the Circle of William Egley, bringing connoisseurial interest and art-historical weight. Superb contemporary presentation in Larson Juhl distressed gilt framing, AR70 glass and smart black-and-gold mount – ready to hang in a private collection, museum, or historic house setting.
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