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Copley Fine Art Auctions is the world's leading American sporting art auction company. Located in Hingham, MA, Copley specializes in antique decoys and 19th- and 20th-century American, sporting, and wildlife paintings. Principal Stephen O'Brien Jr., a fourth-generation sportsman with a refined colle...Read more
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Jul 11, 2024
The Chambers Deming-Seitz Canada Goose
Thomas Chambers (1860-1948)
Wallaceburg, Ontario, Canada, c. 1915
22 in. long
Thomas Chambers (1860-1948) was born in Toronto, Ontario. He hunted ducks and geese as a boy and sold his excess quarry to the market. He later worked for Canadian sportsmen at the St. Anne’s Club on the Johnson Channel, which flows into Lake St. Clair. In 1900, the St. Clair Flats Shooting Company’s first president, George Warin (1830-1905) recommended Thomas Chambers for the position of full-time marsh manager of the club.
Incorporated in 1876, the St. Clair Flats Shooting Company was one of the oldest hunting clubs on Lake St. Clair. Chambers lived on the club’s property in an adjacent house with his wife and three children. Chambers would remain its manager until his retirement in 1943. According to author Bernard Crandell, it was during this time as manager that the 6 foot 1 inch Chambers earned the nickname "King Tom." Over the years, the membership of St. Clair Flats Shooting Company gradually changed from all Canadians to predominantly Americans.
In addition to his work for the Club, “King Tom” was also one of the nation’s most accomplished carvers. His decoys were in high demand from the members and even during the Depression a rig of a dozen Chambers decoys would command the unheard of price of $75. The bottom board of this hollow decoy is branded "THOS. CHAMBERS." The absence of his "MAKER" brand presents the possibility that this decoy was from Chamber's personal gunning rig. It is also branded “P. H. D.” and retains its “P. H. DEMING” painted stencil. Paul H. Deming was a St. Clair Flats Shooting Company member from 1912-1955.
The condition of this decoy can, in part, be explained by the sparse usage of goose decoys due to the historically low number of this species in the region. Less than a dozen of these geese in original paint are known today. With its exceptional form and provenance, this bird ranks as one of Canada's finest goose decoys.
Of a closely related decoy, Julie Hall, a folk art historian, wrote in 1976, "Such a beautiful prize in original paint with complete history is a rare find today."
Original paint with even gunning wear, several tight age lines along back. A thin strip of olive green paint was added to seal body seams of this rig.
Provenance: Paul H. Deming Rig
Joe Tonelli Collection
Spencer Seitz Collection
The George Secor Decoy Collection to Benefit Delta Waterfowl
Literature: Patricia Fleming and Thomas Carpenter, eds., "Traditions in Wood: A History of Wildfowl Decoys in Canada," Altona, ON, 1987, p.141, related decoy illustrated. Julie Hall, "Collectible Decoys--- An Endangered Species?" North American Decoys, Spanish Fork, UT, Summer 1976, p. 20, related decoy illustrated. Bernard W. Crandell, "Decoying: St. Clair to the St. Lawrence," Erin, ON, 1988.
Please refer to the description; if you have questions, email colin@copleyart.com.
Shipping info
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