Portacenere - Mappin & Webb - Cheetah





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Portacenere Cheetah di Mappin & Webb, argentato placcato, Princes Plate – London & Sheffield, diametro 10,5 cm, altezza 1,5 cm, peso 71 g, metà XX secolo, originale, stato ragionevole.
Descrizione del venditore
Vintage Armstrong Siddeley Cheetah Aviation Ashtray - Mappin & Webb Princes Plate - Mid 20th Century
A fine vintage aviation ashtray directly connected to the golden age of British aeronautics.
At its center is an engraved representation of the Armstrong Siddeley Cheetah radial engine, one of the most widely used British aircraft engines from the 1930s to the 1950s. This engine powered several now-iconic aircraft of the period, including:
Avro Anson – RAF training and coastal reconnaissance aircraft during the Second World War
Airspeed Oxford – the principal advanced trainer used for British aircrew instruction
de Havilland DH.89 Dragon Rapide – famous civilian and military transport aircraft
Percival Proctor – communication and radio-training aircraft
Founded in 1919, Armstrong Siddeley occupied a distinctive place in British industrial history, producing both aircraft engines and high-end motor cars in the same world of engineering prestige as Rolls-Royce.
Its aviation-engine activity later became part of Bristol Siddeley in 1959, before that company was acquired by Rolls-Royce in 1966. The Armstrong Siddeley name therefore belongs today to the wider technical and industrial heritage of Rolls-Royce.
This ashtray was made by Mappin & Webb, bearing the Princes Plate mark and the prestigious London & Sheffield manufacture reference, adding an additional layer of British decorative and industrial pedigree.
Details
Object: aviation ashtray
Theme: Armstrong Siddeley Cheetah radial engine
Maker: Mappin & Webb – Princes Plate – London & Sheffield
Material: silver-plated metal
Diameter: 10.5 cm
Height: 1.5 cm
Weight: 71 g
Period: mid-20th century
A highly evocative collector’s piece, combining aviation history, British engineering heritage, and refined decorative metalwork. It would display beautifully on a desk, in an office, workshop, library, or aviation-themed collection.
Condition is good overall, with an attractive period patina and normal traces of age and use consistent with the object’s history. Please study the photographs carefully, as they form part of the description.
Carefully packed and shipped with great attention.
Vintage Armstrong Siddeley Cheetah Aviation Ashtray - Mappin & Webb Princes Plate - Mid 20th Century
A fine vintage aviation ashtray directly connected to the golden age of British aeronautics.
At its center is an engraved representation of the Armstrong Siddeley Cheetah radial engine, one of the most widely used British aircraft engines from the 1930s to the 1950s. This engine powered several now-iconic aircraft of the period, including:
Avro Anson – RAF training and coastal reconnaissance aircraft during the Second World War
Airspeed Oxford – the principal advanced trainer used for British aircrew instruction
de Havilland DH.89 Dragon Rapide – famous civilian and military transport aircraft
Percival Proctor – communication and radio-training aircraft
Founded in 1919, Armstrong Siddeley occupied a distinctive place in British industrial history, producing both aircraft engines and high-end motor cars in the same world of engineering prestige as Rolls-Royce.
Its aviation-engine activity later became part of Bristol Siddeley in 1959, before that company was acquired by Rolls-Royce in 1966. The Armstrong Siddeley name therefore belongs today to the wider technical and industrial heritage of Rolls-Royce.
This ashtray was made by Mappin & Webb, bearing the Princes Plate mark and the prestigious London & Sheffield manufacture reference, adding an additional layer of British decorative and industrial pedigree.
Details
Object: aviation ashtray
Theme: Armstrong Siddeley Cheetah radial engine
Maker: Mappin & Webb – Princes Plate – London & Sheffield
Material: silver-plated metal
Diameter: 10.5 cm
Height: 1.5 cm
Weight: 71 g
Period: mid-20th century
A highly evocative collector’s piece, combining aviation history, British engineering heritage, and refined decorative metalwork. It would display beautifully on a desk, in an office, workshop, library, or aviation-themed collection.
Condition is good overall, with an attractive period patina and normal traces of age and use consistent with the object’s history. Please study the photographs carefully, as they form part of the description.
Carefully packed and shipped with great attention.

