The Chancery Lane Collection, which was founded in the spring of 1997, is the outgrowth of a lifetime interest in antique silver. Doris Lebo's mother was in 'the business' back in the fifties. Her father started the silver collection at Cheekwood, a local museum. He was president of the English Speaking Union here. When owner Doris Lebo discovered her first pair of Matthew Boulton Old Sheffield silver salts in England in the late 1950s, a personal passion was born. A summer in London as the guest of a local silver dealer secured her budding interest in Georgian silver especially by Hester Bateman and Paul Storr as well as antique jewelry. Fostered further by the tutelage of her parents, Cornelia and Russell Speights, well-known Nashville collectors, the enthusiastic young Lebo added to her first piece during ensuing travels abroad and went on to minor in art history at Vanderbilt University.
Through the years, she nurtured this interest in antiquities by serving as a docent in local museums in cities where she lived, and at the same time she built and important collection in her own right. Upon returning to Nashville in 1995, Lebo found a growing interest in antiques and received numerous requests from individuals and dealers to select pieces for them during her travels. In response to this need for expert professional assistance in choosing unusual heirlooms for important gifts and personal collectors, Lebo decided to transform her long-standing avocation into a vocation.
Named after the location of the famed silver vaults in London, The Chancery Lane Collection specializes in fine antique silver, unique small antiques and jewelry from the British Isles. The Collection includes pieces from England and Scotland produced during the years 1650 - 1950. Lebo believes that everyone - traditionalist or modernist, neophyte or sophisticate - should be able to 'celebrate the present with a gift from the past.' Accordingly, the wide variety of merchandise is selected to suit diverse tastes and budgets.
The hand-selected collection features a wealth of delightful treasures, comprising gifts for ladies, gentlemen, newlyweds, graduates and newborns. Gentleman's gifts include antique meerschaum pipes, snuff boxes made of horn, sterling, tortoise or exotic nuts, desk sets, horn beakers, studs and links, watch fobs, and vesta (match) boxes. For the ladies, there are vinaigrettes, evening purses, sentimental or memorial 'hair' jewelry, chatelaines, Scottish agate jewelry, toiletry bottles, and a variety of antique earrings, bangles and brooches. Newlyweds will appreciate such keepsakes as Georgian wedding bands, carving, fish and fruit sets of ivory, mother of pearl, bone and an outstanding selection of Old Sheffield silver. And for new babies, there are Georgian silver spoons, mugs, pushers, christening sets and napkin rings.
In both the silver and jewelry collections, there are antiques to satisfy discriminating buyers in search of the unique, rare and important. Among the most unusual gifts are lava cameos from Pompeii, purchased by the Victorians as proof of the Grand Tour of Europe, a micro-mosaic cross from late 19th century, and an ivory aide-memoire, similar to our own Filofax for note-taking. Important pieces includes such treasures as Georgian silver from Hester Bateman, 'the queen of English silversmiths,' and her family members, Ann, Peter, William and Jonathan and an extraordinary Old Sheffield tea urn in the style of late 18th century.