Antique American Furniture
American furniture
Very little American furniture is to be seen outside
the United States, and the majority of English and
Continental museums, large and small, show none whatsoever.
The reader ( U.S. or British) may be interested to
know how it differs from the European. Occasionally,
pieces are found in English homes, whence they may
have been brought back by returned settlers, and
if offered by auction it is found they fetch high
prices in comparison with
similar English articles. This higher valuation
is justified by the fact that old American furniture
is rarer than English, much of it is already in
museums in the United States, and there is a large
number of keen collectors to compete for every piece.
Seventeenth-century American furniture resembles
that made in England some fifty years earlier, and
this lag in time continued to be present through
most of the eighteenth century. However, by 1800
or so, with improved conditions in the new country
and better shipping facilities across the Atlantic,
there was very little difference between the interior
of a fashionable mansion in New York and one in London.
As the early settlers in New England were from the
British Isles it would be expected that the furniture
they made was like that of their homeland as they
remembered it. So it was, but local variations occurred
very soon. For instance, the tall cane-backed Jacobean
chair was copied continually in America and remained
popular throughout the eighteenth century, but instead
of the back being filled with a panel of caning often
it was given a series of shaped uprights and became
the 'banister-back' chair.
Similarly, when mahogany became fashionable, English-style
straight-fronted kneehole desks and chests were made
in Newport, Rhode Island, with what is termed a 'block
front*; a type of break-front of serpentine shape,
with one or more of the flat "blocks' carved
with a sunray or shell. Such variations on the designs
from London became popular in the locality where
they were made, but they did not spread far. The
various districts that had been colonized each had
their specialty, but the most notable was certainly
the furniture made in Philadelphia. Basically of
mid-eighteenth-century English design, these chests,
tables, chairs and other pieces were ornamented with
carving and fretwork in a style
that differentiates them clearly from London work.
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