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Bottle of 1815 Rainwater Madeira featured in Heritage's June 20 Wine Auction |
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Madeira 1815. Rainwater, Unknown Producer, ms, hwisl, htal, tl, crc, taped label, bottled in 1910, from the cellar of Gov. Ridgley of Maryland, likely owned by JP Morgan.
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DALLAS, TX.- On June 20, historic winemaking, early U.S. politics and the collecting traditions of the Founding Era elite will converge in Heritages Fine & Rare Wine Signature® Auction. The feature in the auction is ancient Madeira, including a dOliveiras Malvasia Reserva Madeira from 1875, a William H. Fearing Sercial Madeira from 1816, two bottles of Companhia Vinicola de Madeira Terrantez Madeira dating back to 1795 and a bottle of 1815 Rainwater Madeira originating from one of the great estates of the early American republic.
The 1815 Madeira hails from the esteemed Ridgely family cellars at Hampton Mansion, home of Charles Carnan Ridgely, Marylands governor from 1816 to 1819 and scion of one of early Americas most powerful families. Likely purchased by the pipe and matured in demijohn or cask on the estate, this 1815 vintage was bottled in 1910, nearly a century after harvest, and bears the G.G. mark found in the archival invoice of 200 bottles sold that year by John Ridgely to the legendary financier and collector J.P. Morgan. That invoice, now preserved in the archives of Marylands Hampton National Historic Site, lists two crates containing Hampton Madeira 1815 G.G., directly matching this bottle.
With a vintage marking the very year Ridgely was elected to office, provenance tying it to both an American governor and one of the most powerful financiers in history, and physical documentation preserved in a national archive, this bottle is not only a relic of Madeiras golden age, says Frank Martell, Heritages Senior Director of Fine & Rare Wine. It is a tangible artifact of American history, collecting culture and transatlantic legacy.
The label affixed to the bottle offers a brief biography of Governor Ridgely and a generational accounting of the family. However, as noted by Gregory R. Weidman, chief curator at Hampton National Historic Site, it is unlikely the Ridgelys produced the label themselves. The labels historical narration, referencing facts the family already would have known, suggests it was likely commissioned by Morgan or his Baltimore agent Douglas H. Thomas, a prominent banker and renowned Madeira collector who helped facilitate the transaction. This type of label may have been created for cataloging or gifting purposes within Morgans inner circle and reflects the connoisseurship of the Gilded Age elite.
The bottle was later acquired at the Heublein Premiere National Auction of Rare Wines on May 27, 1976, in New Orleans. According to Hamptons curators, another bottle from the same bottling with nearly identical labeling was donated to the museum in 1991 by a Washington, D.C., gentleman who had received it from the owner of the famed Brussels Restaurant, a New York dining institution that closed in the 1980s. That donor also provided a photocopy of the Heublein auction listing, linking the bottle to the 1976 sale.
Sister bottles with matching labels and verified Ridgely provenance are now housed in the permanent collection of the Hampton National Historic Site.
The bottles of ancient Madeira arent the only exceptional lots in Heritages expertly curated June auction, however. The sale also offers a tour through the top echelons of the fine wine world, featuring more than 700 lots with nearly 5,000 bottles from distinguished private cellars with impeccable provenance.
The auction is particularly strong in domestic Cabernet Sauvignon and Meritage blends, including 49 lots of Screaming Eagle and 22 lots of Harlan Estate. Trophy wines include a case of 2014 Chateau Petrus, plus rare Burgundy gems such as 2017 DRC La Tâche and 2022 Cros Parantoux from Emmanuel Rouget.
As Martell notes, Whether youre seeking a single crown jewel or exploring deep regional collections through both single bottles and mixed lots, this sale delivers exceptional cellar-worthy opportunities.
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