Stony Jack and the lost jewels of Cheapside Treasure and ghosts in the London clay

Victoria Shepherd

Book - 2025

"June 1912. A pair of workmen deposit a heavy ball of clay in the antiques shop of George Fabian Lawrence, or 'Stony Jack' as he's better known. As Lawrence picks through the mud, a speck of gold catches his eye. A pearl earring tumbles into his hand, then another. A Burmese ruby follows; then Colombian emeralds, lapis lazuli from Afghanistan and turquoise from Iran; tankards; watches; topaz; amazonite. Stony Jack has discovered the greatest single cache of Elizabethan treasure. Diving into London's bustling, sometimes lawless, antiques trade at the turn of the century, Victoria Shepherd provides a compelling portrait of the city at the height of empire. A thrilling ride through Edwardian London, from the marble hal...ls of the British Museum to the East End's maze of tenements and alleyways, this book oversees the transformation of the city into a modern metropolis"--

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942.1082/Shepherd
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2nd Floor New Shelf 942.1082/Shepherd (NEW SHELF) Due Oct 24, 2025
Subjects
Published
London : Oneworld 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Victoria Shepherd (author)
Physical Description
387 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 353-374) and index.
ISBN
9780861548880
  • Prologue: The Letter
  • I. The Cellar
  • II. The Jewels Make an Entrance
  • III. The Lawrence Family Guard the Treasure
  • IV. The Jewels Go Out into the World
  • V. A Pawnbroker's Son
  • VI. Insider Trading and the Egyptian Book of the Dead
  • VII. The Hoard on Show in the Glittering Gold Room
  • VIII. The Queen's Private Views
  • IX. Who Will Protect a Man These Days?
  • X. The Treasures Go Back Underground
  • XI. The Show Must Go on
  • XII. The Question of Identity and the OriginalOwner
  • XIII. The Chance of Escape
  • XIV. A Reckoning
  • XV. Making the Catalogue
  • XVI. The Auction of Rings
  • XVII. The Bank of England
  • XVIII. Stage and Screen
  • XIX. What We Leave Behind
  • XX. The Postwar Ghost
  • XXI. Looking for the St George Opal Ring
  • Postscript
  • Acknowledgements
  • List of Illustrations
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this tantalizing account, BBC documentary producer Shepherd (A History of Delusions) revisits the mystery of the Cheapside Hoard, the largest collection of Tudor and Stuart treasures ever uncovered. The trove of gemstones and gold jewelry was unearthed in June 1912 by Central London workmen, who took their haul to antiquarian George Fabian Lawrence (known as Stony Jack due to his reputation for paying "good money for any old stone"). Lawrence promptly sold much of the Hoard to the newly established London Museum. The mystery of the Hoard's original owner captivated the British public, who spread stories of a "tall thin man in Elizabethan costume who looked very angry" putting in spectral appearances near the jewels' display. Shepherd meticulously examines the Hoard's possible origins and its murky fate--over time, many pieces slipped away. Her account revolves around a profile of Lawrence, revealing him to be a complexly influential agent of the building up of London's vaunted museum collections. She finds that Lawrence's willingness to let paperwork go unfinished and to acquire artifacts through underhanded but efficient means made him popular with museum officials as well as royals, who may have surreptitiously acquired some of the Hoard for themselves. Full of fascinating asides, including a tangent on the similar fate of artifacts later recovered from Tutankhamun's Tomb, this rivets. (July)

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