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 British monarchs and members of the Royal Family undertook lengthy tours to strengthen ties with other countries, and also to learn more about the culture and history of those regions. The Prince of Wales’s tour of India was envisaged as a way of forging diplomatic links between the Indian rulers and the British Crown. The Prince exchanged gifts with each ruler he met and some of the most significant Indian works of art in the Royal Collection today were acquired during this tour.” In addition to the round Prince of Wales escutcheon that was standard on the pistols from this series, the case with this pistol has an added plaque reading: “PRESENTED TO/CAPTAIN R.H. GRANT RA/BY/H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES/WHEN SERVING AS QR MR GENERAL/OF H.R.H. CAMP IN INDIA/A.D. 1875-6.” The visit in 1875-1876 was covered in “India in 1875- 75: The Visit of the Prince of Wales” published in 1876 in
which Captain R.H. Grand, R.A., is listed as the “master of the encampment.”Various newspaper articles and other period sources make similar statements. For example, The Times
on August 23, 1875, reported “Captain R.H. Grant, Deputy- Assistant-Quartermaster-General, will be detailed for the duty
The concave rib has a bead front sight and is signed “WILKINSON & SON - GUN MAKERS TO HER MAJESTY
& THE PRINCE OF WALES.” The underside of the barrels have Birmingham proofs flaking the “25” bore marking, and the lug is marked “14” designating the number
in this special series. The underside of the barrels and water table have the matching serial number. The non- rebounding back action locks are signed “WILKINSON/ PALL MALL/LONDON.” The breech, action, locks,
and furniture have primarily border engraving with some floral accents. The pommel cap has a lanyard swivel. The checkered walnut stock has a large gold wrist escutcheon with raised Prince of Wales badge surrounded by the insignia of the Most Exalted Order of the Star of India. The case has coordinating brass escutcheon on the lid with the badge of the Prince of Wales in addition to the noted inscription plaque, a Wilkinson & Son trade label inside the lid, and fitted interior with a coordinating suite of ebony accessories, including a powder measure, wrench, screwdriver,
 296
  LOT 1348
Historic Prince of Wales Presentation Cased Engraved Wilkinson Side
Lever Double Barrel Howdah
Pistol with Gold Escutcheon Presented to Captain R.H.
Grant, Quarter Master General of the Prince’s Camp During His
Trip to India in 1875-1876 - Serial no. 6565, 577 cal., 6 5/8 inch solid rib bbl., blue/
casehardened/gold finish, walnut stock. This pistol is number 14 of approximately 20 of “howdah” pistols supplied by Wilkinson to the Prince of Wales (the future King Edward VII) for presentation during the prince’s visit to India in 1875- 1876. In the list of recipients of these pistols in the included documentation, R.H. Grant (listed as “Major Grant, R.A.”) is the only Englishman. In the included catalog for Wallis & Wallis’s “Special Spring Sale” from May 25th, 1983, where this pistol was featured as Lot 104, they state that he was the only British recipient of one of these historic pistols. The prior pistol in
this series (sn 6564) is held in the Royal Armouries Collection (Object Number XII.1579). Per the Royal Collection Trust,
“In October 1875, Albert Edward Prince of Wales, the eldest son of Queen Victoria, embarked on an extensive tour of the Indian subcontinent. Here the Prince visited more than 21 towns and cities before returning to England in May 1876.
of Quartermaster-General in the Royal camp...” The article “The Prince’s Visit to India” in Lloyd’s Weekly on August 29, 1875, reports: “It is stated that Captain R.H. Grant, R.A., will form part of
the staff of the Prince of Wales as Quartermaster- General of his royal highness’s camp, joining at Calcutta, where his services will be required in connection with the Star of India investiture.” The latter is particularly relevant given the inclusion of the insignia of the order on the
wrist escutcheon and the fact that Grant
was the only Englishman who received one
of these pistols. His involvement with investiture
during the Prince of Wales visit suggests that Grant
may have received the pistol on January 1, 1876, the day selected in Queen Victoria’s warrant for the Prince of Wales to hold an investiture of the Order during his tour. There were multiple R.H. Grants in the service in the period, but he appears to have been a “gentleman cadet” commissioned as a lieutenant in the Royal Artillery dating to June 22, 1859, and to have served as an aide-de-camp to Governor Col. Sir William Thomas Denison of Madras in the 1860s. It is clear that by the 1870s, he was promoted to captain in the Royal Artillery and was one of eight deputy assistant quartermaster generals and was assigned to the Oude Division. Newspapers indicate he retired with a gratuity in 1878.
    










































































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