Charles Collier Michell (1793-1851)

Get a Michell Certificate of Authenticity for your painting (COA) for your Michell drawing.

For all your Michell artworks you need a Certificate of Authenticity (COA) in order to sell, to insure or to donate for a tax deduction.

Getting a Michell Certificate of Authenticity (COA) is easy. Just send us photos and dimensions and tell us what you know about the origin or history of your Michell painting or drawing.

If you want to sell your Michell painting or drawing use our selling services. We offer Michell selling help, selling advice, private treaty sales and full brokerage.

We have been authenticating Michell and issuing certificates of authenticity since 2002. We are recognized Michell experts and Michell certified appraisers. We issue COAs and appraisals for all Michell artworks.

Our Michell paintings and drawings authentications are accepted and respected worldwide.

Each COA is backed by in-depth research and analysis authentication reports.

The Michell certificates of authenticity we issue are based on solid, reliable and fully referenced art investigations, authentication research, analytical work and forensic studies.

We are available to examine your Michell painting or drawing anywhere in the world.

You will generally receive your certificates of authenticity and authentication report within two weeks. Some complicated cases with difficult to research Michell paintings or drawings take longer.

Our clients include Michell collectors, investors, tax authorities, insurance adjusters, appraisers, valuers, auctioneers, Federal agencies and many law firms.

We perform Charles Collier Michell art authentication, appraisal, certificates of authenticity (COA), analysis, research, scientific tests, full art authentications. We will help you sell your Charles Collier Michell or we will sell it for you.

Portrait of Michell, Artist Unknown

Portrait of Michell, Artist Unknown

Charles Collier Michell, later known as Charles Cornwallis Michell 29 March 1793 – 28 March 1851, was a soldier, professor at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst, first surveyor-general in the Cape, road engineer, architect, artist and naturalist. Born in Exeter, Devon,and called Charles Cornwallis Michell later in his life, because of the proximity to Cornwall of his birthplace, Michell headed a brigade at the battles of Vittoria and Toulouse, took part in Waterloo and was appointed teacher of military drawing at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst on 24 March 1824 and professor of military fortification on 25 December 1825 and promoted to the brevet rank of major shortly thereafter. He was fluent in Spanish, Portuguese and French.

Michell was appointed as surveyor-general at the Cape in 1828, (having probably heard of the post through his cousin Rufane Donkin) at the same time holding the positions of superintendent of public works and civil engineer. For performing these functions, he received an annual salary of £800. The surveyor-general’s duties included taking charge of the detailed surveys needed to produce a good map of the Colony, improving passes and roads and surveying the Colony’s border accurately. He was an outstanding architect, designing various churches such as St. Paul’s in Rondebosch and St. John’s in Bathurst. He suggested improvements to Table Bay Harbour and designed lighthouses at Mouille Point, Cape Agulhas (supposedly modelled on the Pharos of Alexandria) and Cape Recife.

Map of Cape Town 1837

Map of Cape Town 1837

He acted as assistant quartermaster in the Sixth Frontier War in 1834. His most active area was in the planning and construction of roads, as well as their improvement, being responsible for the planning of Michell’s Pass near Ceres – a vast improvement on the old Mostert’s Hoek Pass – and the Houw Hoek Pass near Elgin, both carried out by Andrew Geddes Bain, as well as the Sir Lowry’s and Montagu Passes, the latter constructed over the Outeniqua Mountains by an Australian road-engineer Henry Fancourt White in 1843-47. Besides all his other skills, Michell was an accomplished water-colorist, particularly of landscapes. His illustrations appeared in Narrative of a voyage of observation among the colonies of Western Africa and of a campaign in Kaffirland (1837), written by his son-in-law, Capt. Sir James Edward Alexander. He was granted a pension in 1848 and returned to England where he died on 28 March 1851 at Eltham.

While Michell was posted in Toulouse, he married schoolgirl Anne D’Arragon on 10 October 1814, after eloping. She was the only daughter of a retired officer in the army of King Louis XVI of France and her parents disapproved of the match. Their first two children were born in Lisbon, Julia Anne in 1815 and Frederica Louisa in June 1817. The third, Eveline Marie, was born in Nantes on 16 April 1821, and the last Anne in Cape Town on 28 October 1829.

Cradock Pass, Outeniqua 1840

Cradock Pass, Outeniqua 1840

Still wondering about an African painting in your family collection? Contact us…it could be by Charles Collier Michell.


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