Date: Fri 24-Sep-1999
Date: Fri 24-Sep-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
York-Arion-Melvin
Full Text:
York Antiques Show
(with 32 cuts)
YORK, PENN. -- Some of the best shows in New York can't boast a continuous run
of 133 stellar performances. However, the York Antiques Show and Sale can and
did when it held its 133rd bi-annual three-day run September 3-5.
Manager Melvin Arion placed all 91 selected exhibitors in room settings in the
new Memorial Hall East building. The building is perfect for an antiques show
(even one of this size) with its wide aisles, air-conditioning, and cafeteria
-- all the creature comforts antiques show buffs have come to demand. The show
opened Saturday morning at 11 am to a very, very long crowd of patrons eager
to enter.
The majority of the exhibitors featured Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century
American, English and country furniture and accessories, coin silver tea sets,
flatware, good china, and ancestral paintings. The quality of the antiques
displayed was such that it took an inordinant amount of time to visit all 91
booths.
Within the first half-hour, first-time exhibitor Jeff R. Bridgman of Bridgman
Antiques, Mansfield, Penn., had already made a substantial sale. Sold was a
fine seldom-seen Chester County circa 1770 chair-rail Windsor. This chair type
is a real rarity.
When asked how he replaced the sold inventory, Bridgman said, "It's not as
tough as some people think. You just have to go up and down the road a lot."
Bridgman also offered a group of textiles plus a good variety of late
Eighteenth and early Nineteenth Century furniture and a selection of redware
and yellowware.
Long-time exhibitor (20-plus years) at the York Antiques Show, Effie Sheppard
of Sheppard's Antiques, Bedford, Penn., featured a large array of country
store and painted furniture items. Also shown was a selection of children's
toys and a grouping of stoneware. Asked if the children's toys sold, Sheppard
replied, "They sure do. And if they don't I get to enjoy them."
Brill's Antiques, Newport News, Va., brought a fine R&W Wilson four-piece tea
set in coin silver.
About three years ago, Melvin "Butch" Arion purchased the York Antiques Show
from owner Paul L. Ettline. During the afternoon on Saturday Ettline visited
the show. In discussing his time managing the show, Ettline said, "I took over
this show [as manager] from Mabel Renner. She was the original owner. She
started this show [in 1934]. When she started the show, admission was 35
cents. I started working for her carrying in dishes for $10 a week."
About three years ago Ettline was involved in an accident which caused him to
retire. As Ettline said, "I had to give up the show business. So I said to
Butch [Melvin L. Arion], `Why don't you take over the show?'" At that time
Ettline was 77 years young.
Eleanor Wallace of Wood 'n Things, Lititz, Penn., mentioned she had done the
show since, "before it moved over here. I would say five years." Wallace
specializes in "country furniture, early woodworking tools and accessories.
That covers a lot."
Carol Meekins of Country Treasures, Preston, Md., featured a New York State
cupboard in old gray paint with scalloped top. Meekins said, "We specialize in
Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century painted furniture. This [see photo] is a
wonderful piece, a York County, Pennsylvania, decorated chest."
Bunny Nolt of Worthington, Ohio, brought a cherry corner cupboard circa 1850
that originally came from Kentucky. Also shown was a tiger maple chest with a
one-board cherry top.
Betty Apt, from Pittsburgh, Penn., was one of a few show exhibitors
specializing in china. Staffordshire is Apt's specialty. "Anywhere from the
late Eighteenth Century up to today really," Apt said.
New England South Antiques, Roswell, Ga., specializes in Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Century paintings plus formal and country furniture. Offered was a
good oxbow diminutive chest in birch, circa 1780. Irvin and Delores Boyd, Fort
Washington, Penn., displayed a mid-Nineteenth Century country Chippendale
apothecary chest made of poplar and pine. Also shown was a Hepplewhite
Pembroke table in cherrywood, circa 1780; a Federal period corner cupboard,
also in cherry; and a Chippendale chest of drawers, circa 1770, from
Pennsylvania.
Barbara Walker of Antiques and Images, Avondale, Penn., brought a large
collection of highly collectible Quimper.
Prior to the show's opening on Saturday morning, Melvin "Butch" Arion took
time to offer more background.
"Paul Ettline had been running this show since 1958. Mabel Renner started the
show in 1934. It's one of the oldest shows in the country. He sold it to me
three years ago. He had it in the Old Main Building. And I had one show in
there when he sold it to me.
"Mr Rutter, the CEO of the fairgrounds, asked me if I would like to have the
antiques show in the new [Memorial Hall East] building that they had just
completed. And we have grown ever since."
"I bought the name of the show and a few of his walls [used for exhibitor room
settings]. We have had 1,100 to 1,200 walls built to accommodate the show.
When he ran it, there were about 50 dealers. And he never had a completely
walled show. There are 91 booths [at this show] and 93 exhibitors."
When asked about his background, Arion said, "I was an antiques dealer since I
was 18 years old in Maryland and Virginia, specializing in Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Century furniture and accessories. I was an exhibitor in Jim Burk's
show for over 20 years, until I bought this one. I did 38 shows a year.
"It was the fall of 1996 that I organized this. [Paul Ettline] just turned to
me and said, `Butch, I want you to take this show.' He was 77 then. It has
been on Labor Day weekend since 1934, and the 28th to 30th of January."
Sally Good, of Lahaska, Penn., displayed in booth number one. Good brought a
general selection of toleware and Gaudy Dutch in the strawberry pattern. Good
was another of the many dealers that reported sales early in the day. She sold
a green painted drysink (paint old but not original) that featured a scalloped
skirt.
Marilyn Kemble of Norwich, Ohio, showed an early American diminutive Queen
Anne highboy in maple, circa 1750; a good demilune card table with string
inlays, circa 1790; and a fine circa 1800 Mid-Atlantic Hepplewhite period
tall-case clock, one of the few seen on the floor.
Joseph Beardin from Rising Sun, Md., had a southern jelly cupboard in original
finish with an unusual gallery on the top, probably circa 1820. It was found
in Dacusville, Pickens County, S.C. Other southern items included a stand and
a farm table. Beardin is still considered an "outlander," having only done the
show six to seven times.
To continue the continuous run, Arion has scheduled the 134th York Antiques
Show in January.