Seller Story: Peter Marrocco, Cincinnati, OH
“My great-grandfather John A. Hillenbrand’s father, a German immigrant and woodworker, settled in the German-speaking community of Cincinnati before the Civil War. He relocated to Batesville, Indiana in 1861 and soon passed away, leaving his 16-year-old son orphaned with two infant sisters. John abandoned the family farm and began purchasing small sections of woodland, selling hardwood to the railroads for track ties, then selling the cleared land to farmers.
Like his father, John combined hard work and acumen to create several Hillenbrand family enterprises, including a general store. In 1906, he bought the Batesville Casket Company, founded in 1884, saving it from bankruptcy. He employed German woodworkers, carvers, and cabinet makers to build the coffins. In 1929, his son William started Hill-Rom, a hospital furniture manufacturing company. Batesville Casket Company and Hill-Rom would compose what would be Hillenbrand Industries, which has since become a Fortune 500 company.
My great-grandfather on my father’s side, Anthony Scola, was an Italian silk dyer. Many of the items came over from Italy with him between 1907 to 1912. The marble tables, Oriental carpet, marble bust, and a Spanish painting that dates back to the 15th century were among these. Scola built a famous mansion in Paterson, New Jersey on 178 Durrom Avenue around 1920. When he died, he left the property to the Roman Catholic Church and it was used as a Bishop’s mansion for the next 50 or 60 years. That’s where a lot of these items came from.” – Peter Marrocco, great-grandson
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Louis Vuitton Mini Sac HL Handbag in Monogram Canvas
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Douglas “Bumo” Johnpeer Landscape Oil Painting, 2024
EBTH Columbus - Hilliard
Waterford Crystal Millennium Collection Champagne Bucket Featuring Five Wishes
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Robert Riddle Baker Landscape Acrylic Painting "Last of the Day," 2023
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Stained Glass Window Panel With Floral Motif
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Faino Oil Painting of Still Life with Flowers
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
14K 1.70 CT Sapphire and Diamond Navette Ring
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Oil Painting of Spring Landscape, Mid-20th Century
EBTH Columbus - Hilliard
Impasto Style Landscape Offset Lithograph, 21st Century
EBTH Columbus - Hilliard
Offset Lithograph After Claude Monet "Le Bassin des Nympheas"
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Pair of Faux Leather, Brass-Tacked and Ebonized Wood Club Chairs
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Fulper Pottery Earthenware Amphora Vessel With Drip Glaze, Early 20th C.
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
W. LeNoury Maritime Oil Painting of Ship at Sea
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Hollywood Regency Style Brass and Blue Velveteen Upholstered Stools
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Michael Kors Everest Two-Tone Wristwatch
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Southwestern Desert Landscape Oil Painting, 1987
EBTH Columbus - Hilliard
7'11 x 11'3 Machine Made Oriental Weavers "Nirvana Collection" Area Rug
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Mechanical School Speed Limit Sign
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
Jack Meanwell Abstract Figurative Watercolor Painting, 1978
EBTH Cincinnati - Blue Ash
5'6 x 7'3 Hand-Knotted Persian Kurdish Area Rug
Where did your great-grandfather source some of the artwork?
John Hillenbrand funded and financed many artists in the early 1900s. Cincinnati was considered the Gateway to the West, and at one point was one of the largest cities in the world. For that reason, it drew many artists such as Ralph Blakelock, Henry Farny, Joseph Henry Sharp, and “Wild Bill” Hickock even had his residence here. My great-grandfather and his siblings would fund the artists’ journeys out to the American West, and when they returned, they’d give them some of their artwork as repayment. That artwork was passed down to my grandmother and then to my mother.
Was this dining table and chairs set part of the Batesville inventory?
Hillenbrand incorporated Batesville Cabinet Company in 1913 and focused this company on the production of dining room furniture.The dining room table and chairs were custom made by Batesville Cabinet Company for my grandfather and have been in our family since. I have many memories sitting around that table for dinners with my family. Anyone from Cincinnati or Batesville will find the items in this sale very historically relevant to them.