Lot 170 , Koenigsmarck, Count Hans von. The Markhor Sport in Cashmere. London, 1910. Original blue pictorial cloth binding, a very good copy. Together with Cobb, E. H. Lieut-Col. The Markhor. 1958. A reprint from Oryx, the Journal

Koenigsmarck, Count Hans von. The Markhor Sport in Cashmere. London, 1910. Original blue pictorial cloth binding, a very good copy. Together with Cobb, E. H. Lieut-Col. The Markhor. 1958. A reprint from Oryx, the Journal

° Koenigsmarck, Count Hans von. The Markhor Sport in Cashmere. London, 1910. Original blue pictorial cloth binding, a very good copy. Together with Cobb, E. H. Lieut-Col. The Markhor. 1958. A reprint from Oryx, the Journal of the Fauna Preservation Society in the original printed wrappers. * With a presentation inscription from the author on the front wrapper. An amusing note about Lieut-Col Cobb written by Malcolm Lyell is loosely inserted, the note ends “Evelyn used to visit me at the Westley Richards shop at 23 Conduit Street. He never stopped talking, and even when I had got him out of the glass front door and closed it he used to continue talking through the glass!”
Malcolm Lyell (1922-2011) a good shot, a fisherman, a naturalist, a gardener, a hunter, an adventurer, and a raconteur who has been described as having been the doyen of the London gun trade.

After being educated at Bryanston and Westminster School, he took a degree in forestry at Bangor University in 1943 and worked as a forester until 1947 when he became the manager of Westley Richards London showrooms.

In 1955 when the parent company made the decision to close the London showrooms, Malcolm sought the backing of British and American sportsmen to finance his takeover of the business and established Westley Richards (Agency). Soon after acquiring it he bought Jeffery’s the gun-makers, and later Farlow’s, the fishing tackle specialists.

The ultimate salesman, he not only had a comprehensive knowledge but also loved and was proud of what he was offering for sale. Over the next twelve years he developed, expanded, and advanced the business with great panache and the able assistance of his wife Rosamunde (they married in 1949).

His success brought its own reward, in 1959 Holland and Holland invited him to merge his company with theirs and he became the managing director of the new enterprise. By the time of his retirement in 1988, he had acquired a plethora of clients many of whom became great friends; they included kings and princes, maharajahs, presidents, and prime ministers. Hollywood stars, white hunters, sportsmen and trophy collectors fell under his spell and with Rosamunde and his two daughters Caroline and Harmony he travelled the world combining business with pleasure.

Malcolm was born a collector, as a boy he collected objects to exhibit and opened his own “museum” in his parents’ house in South Kensington (admission to it cost the viewer one penny). Throughout his life his own houses became filled with treasures gathered from across the globe.

His passion and the intense enjoyment that he derived from his collection can be seen in the ephemera and the considered personal notes and annotations that he added to most of his books.

£200-250

Sold for £180