Green’s Dictionary of Slang

here and there n.

[rhy. sl.; the phr. is never truncated]

1. (Aus.) hair.

[UK]Partridge DSUE (8th edn) 548/2: C.20.

2. (orig. US) a chair.

[US]A.J. Pollock Und. Speaks.
[US]St. Vincent Troubridge ‘Some Notes on Rhyming Argot’ in AS XXI:1 Feb. 46: here and there. A chair. (Origin uncertain, but probably English.) This is doubted. Lord Mayor was always used.
[US]Berrey & Van den Bark Amer. Thes. Sl. (2nd edn).
[UK]S.T. Kendall Up the Frog.
[UK]M. Coles Bible in Cockney 16: Now, sit dahn in your ol’ here-and-there, and enjoy the story.