Peter M. Kenny
Flat Gates, Draw Bars, Twists, and Urns: New Yorks Distinctive,
Early Baroque Oval Tables with Falling Leaves
The substantial body of surviving oval tables with falling leaves made
in New York City and in the rural towns of the Hudson River Valley, Long
Island, and central and northeastern New Jersey from the late-seventeenth
through the mid-eighteenth century comprise a remarkable group that is
structurally and ornamentally unconventionalin comparison to their
New England counterpartsand redolent of a bold baroque design ethos.
These tables present a brief but fascinating chapter in American furniture
history and a peculiar interpretive challenge as by-products of Anglo-Dutch
cultural fermentation in late-seventeenth-century New York.
In medieval times dining tables were the largest and most cumbersome pieces
of furniture next to beds. They could be built-in or, as was sometimes
the case with trestle tables, taken apart and either stored away or moved
to another location. By the 1500s, however, societal changes began rendering
these behemoths obsolete. Large, transient medieval households with mostly
portable possessions gave way to smaller households occupying year-round
dwellings. In the interest of conserving space in these furniture-filled
interiors, joiners found ways of reducing the sisze of dining tables without
sacrificing too much surface area.1
In England, two types of dining tables with relatively compact bases and
tops that could be expanded or reduced in size emerged by about 1550.
Furniture historian Victor Chinnery suggests that the earlier of the two
designs consisted of a heavy, open-frame base and a fixed rectangular
top with hinged, floor-length leaves attached to the ends. When raised,
the leaves were supported by heavy lopers or draw bars pulled out from
inside the frame. This rather awkward design apparently never came into
wide use, but hinged or falling leaves, as they were known in the period,
presaged subsequent advances in variable-top dining table design. A slightly
later development was the considerably more elegant draw table, or drawing
table as the form was referred to in sixteenth-century inventories. This
design featured an open-frame base and a large rectangular top that rested
loosely on a fixed transverse center board and had leaves inserted at
either end. When drawn out from under the top, the leaves cantilevered
off the frame on tapered rails that ran in tracks inside the aprons and
were held in compression, at full extension, by the fixed transverse board.
Draw tables were extremely popular in England and northern Europe during
the late Renaissance and continued in production and use well into the
baroque period.2
Tables with oval-shaped tops and falling leaves are most closely associated
with the reigns of Charles II and James II, and, as furniture historian
David Barquist suggests, they may be a purely English innovation. The
genesis of the form may lie in the trend toward more relaxed, informal
dining in late-seventeenth-century England. The oval shape tended to sublimate
issues of precedence in seating.3 Lighter and more portable than their earlier, variable-top counterparts,
these tables could be set up in the center of the room for meals and stored
with the leaves down against the wall after use. The leaf supports were
no longer heavy lopers but stylishly turned auxiliary leg supports consisting
of two uprights linked by parallel rails. The inner upright pivoted between
the bottom edge of the side apron and the upper face of the side stretcher,
giving the whole assembly the look of a swinging gate, hence the modern
termgate-leg table. Seventeenth-century appraisers generally described
these tables by size, primary wood, or the shape or kinetic action of
their tops.
Rectangular dining tables of traditional late medieval and Renaissance
form, including draw tables, were made and used in New England from the
1630s onward, whereas oval tables with falling leaves first came on the
scene there in the 1660s. One of the earliest references is the Ovall
Table and set of twelve Turkey worke chayres in the
1669 estate inventory of Antipas Boyse of Boston.4 From their inception, these tables were meant to harmonize with the sets
of turkeywork, cane, and leather chairs sold by Boston merchants. Consequently,
Antipas Boyses oval table with falling leaves probably had the repetitive
spherical turnings of the stylish, low-back Cromwellian chairs
of the 1660s and 1670s, whereas examples from the 16801730 period
had baroque twist, baluster, vase, and urn-shaped turnings resembling
those of imported and domestic high-back cane and leather chairs.
A similar pattern of development seems to hold true for New Netherland
and early colonial New York, although dining tables of the early rectangular
form are exceedingly rare. Oval tables with falling leaves survive in
considerable number, but the paucity of inventories dating before 1680
makes it difficult to determine if the form was in use in New York City
as early as in Boston. It seems unlikely that it was, given that this
apparently was a purely English furniture form and, as historian Michael
Kammen has pointed out, Anglicization did not occur in New York on a large
or permanent scale until nearly a generation after the English conquest
of 1664.5
The 1686 estate inventory of Cornelis Steenwyck, one of the wealthiest
residents of New Amsterdam and twice mayor, lists an ovall table
as well as a dozen Russia leather and rush-seated chairs in the kitchen
chamber, a sort of common family living room. In the great
chamber or best room, however, a square table valued
at £10 is listed, along with a dozen Rush leather Chyres
and two Velvet Chyres with fine silver lace. The high value
assigned to this table and the presence of fourteen chairs suggests that
it was an especially fine example, possibly having an expandable top;
an imported Dutch baroque draw table of rich rosewood and ebony immediately
comes to mind. Physical and documentary evidence proves that draw tables
were imported and used in New York Dutch homes long after the English
conquest; the physical proof is witnessed in an oak and ebony example
with a solid Phillipse family history (fig. 1),
and the written record includes the square table that pulls out
that was listed in the 1711 estate inventory of Margareta Schuyler of
Albany.6
Although draw tables and references to them are rare, it seems likely
that they provided some competition early on for oval tables with falling
leaves among this segment of the population, especially if the latter
form was perceived as English.
Only a handful of late-seventeenth-century inventories list oval tables
with falling leaves, and few references from any period specify their
use. Englishwoman Charlotte Lenoxs account of a sumptuous tea in
the home of one New York Dutch family in the late 1730s or early 1740s
describes how such tables were set up in a room and laid out with food
and napery from the earliest period of their use:
|
Immediately after
the tea equipage was removed, a large table was brought out, and covered
with a damask cloth, exquisitely white and fine; upon this table were
placed several sorts of cakes, and teabread, with pots of the most
delicate butter, plates of hungbeef and ham, shaved extremely fine,
wet and dry sweetmeats, every kind of fruit in season, pistacchio
and other nuts, all ready cracked. . . . The liquors were cyder, mead
and Madeira wine. All these things were served in the finest china
and glass.7 |
Tables with Draw-Bar Supports
The approximately sixty surviving early baroque oval tables with falling
leaves can be divided into two broad categories based on their method
of leaf support: those with pivot-leg supports (figs. 2,
3), and those with draw
bars or lopers (fig. 4).
The majority are of the former type. Although distinctive in their own
right, New York tables with pivot legs follow a common English design
formula adopted throughout the colonies in the late seventeenth and early
eighteenth centuries. However, tables with draw-bar supports are unique
to New York, and the seventeen surviving examples represent about 30 percent
of the total.
Draw bars or lopers are rudimentary support mechanisms. They appear on
a few sixteenth- and seventeenth-century English dining tables with variable
tops and on a few other early English table forms, but not on any English
or Dutch tables directly analogous to the New York examples. The way the
support system works is simple and obviously related to the mechanisms
of the earliest draw tables and variable top tables with falling leaves.8
Two wooden bars, rectangular in section, run in a slotted board (or track)
mounted transversely inside the table frame (fig. 5).
Square- or round-section pegs tenoned into the bottom of the bars engage
the slots and serve as stops when the bars are drawn out from inside the
frame through the openings in the side aprons (fig. 6).
The draw bars are usually made of heavy stock, but a few are similar in
scale and section to the lopers on early baroque, slant-lid desks (see
figs. 7, 8).
Draw bars may be partially responsible for the broad proportions of the
tables on which they are used, since the frames had to be wide to accommodate
draw bars of sufficient length to support the leaves. The wide, sturdy
stance of the tables (figs. 9,
10) is complemented by proportionately
stout legs, which consistently measure at least 2 1/2" in diameter
or larger, a stock size that allowed the turner to work deeply into the
wood for dramatic effects.
Five of the tables with draw-bar leaf supports have bold, twisted legs
and dramatic X- or double-ended Y-shaped stretchers (figs. 11,
12). The walnut example
illustrated in figure 12 is probably the earliest of the draw-bar tables. Its stretcher design
parallels that of the 16601680 Dutch-made draw table owned by the
Phillipse family (fig. 1),
and the ovolo-and-bead rail molding matches that on the door frames of
the four earliest surviving American kasten. That this distinctive
molding has only been found on seventeenth-century, Dutch-influenced furniture
strongly suggests that the maker was of Netherlandish rather than English
descent. If so, this table is a late-seventeenth-century Dutch New York
joiners adaptation of a new and unfamiliar English table form. To
accommodate the Dutch-derived stretcher system, he had to utilize that
most rudimentary of support mechanisms, the draw bar or loper, and in
so doing created a new and distinctive Anglo-Dutch table form, one that
today serves as a sensitive indicator of cultural blending in early colonial
New York.9
The four other twisted-leg tables have a slightly different aspect due
to their boxlike, dovetailed frames and separate legs pinned up into the
corners (fig. 11). Although
this construction initially appears rickety, it allows for a firm connection
between the legs and the X-shaped stretchers. (Pinned legs can be rotated
so that their bottom blocks face each other at opposite corners.) The
difference between the boxlike frames with pinned legs and the mortise-and-tenon
frame and leg construction is reminiscent of a change that occurred over
time in American kasten design. Around 1700, boxlike, dovetailed base
units with ball-turned feet pinned up into the front corners began to
replace the heavy post-and-rail facade construction of seventeenth-century
examples.10
The twelve other tables with draw-bar supports all have box stretchers
aligned with the frame and legs with a variety of early baroque turnings,
including vases, rings, balusters, and urns (see figs. 4,
7, 9,
10, 14).
Pivoting gate-leg supports could have been used on these examples, but
for at least two reasons were not: the draw-bar system saved the expense
of turning and framing the gate legs and avoided the annoyance of sitters
occasionally having to straddle a pivot leg. Plain molded stretchers appear
on all but one table (fig. 9),
and they strike a slightly discordant note in the overall design when
compared to the elaborate turnings. However, the stretchers and the broad
overall proportions of the tables (figs. 4,
10) provide a visible link
to earlier heavy, stretcher-base tables with stationary tops, such as
the square table, a rare form now thought only to have been made in New
England.11
Tables with Gate-Leg Supports
Gate-leg tables are of two types, classic examples with turned uprights
and stretchers in the gates, and simpler ones with gates made from molded
boards. Most prominent among the former type are the Sir William Johnson
table (fig. 15) and the
Van Cortlandt family table (fig. 2).
The reputations of these two tables were established in the early years
of this century when Esther Singleton and Luke Vincent Lockwood published
them in their pioneering books on American furniture. Since then these
tables have come to be considered the beau ideals of New York early baroque
table design. (Wallace Nutting reproduced the Sir William Johnson table
in the 1920s and went so far as to call it the Supreme Gate Leg
in the catalogue of his reproductions.) Based on their massive scale and
the quality of their design and workmanship, the reputations of these
two tables are well deserved. What further distinguishes them as high-end
luxury items is their primary wood, mahogany. Singleton considered the
Van Cortlandt table an especially early example of the use of mahogany
in the colonies, an observation that was astute and remarkably prescient;
several New York tables made of mahogany with turned pivot-leg supports
have since come to light (figs. 18,
19, 20,
and another in the collection of the Monmouth County Historical Association
in Freehold, New Jersey). Half a dozen examples of native cherry (fig.
21), walnut, and maple round
out the classic gate legs, bringing the total up to twelve. Although it
is fruitless to try to equate survival rates of specific types with their
popularity, it is instructive to compare the iconic William and
Mary gate leg with the other surviving New York oval tables with
falling leaves to show that this design was only one of the options available
to New Yorkers in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.12
Tables with gates made of flat boards account for the greatest number
of New York oval tables with falling leaves. Of the approximately thirty
examples known, only six have four legs and box stretchers (fig. 16);
the balance have trestle bases with two uprights connected by flat low
stretchers (fig. 17). These
tables caught the eye of Lockwood and Nutting, both of whom illustrated
examples in their books on American furniture. Nutting commented that
tables of this design had recovery histories in Maine, New Hampshire,
and Massachussetts; however, his failure to mention New York has clouded
regional attributions ever since. Of all the known examples, only one
(fig. 3) can be linked to
a likely eighteenth-century Albany owner through a brand on the underside
of its stretcher. Yet there are overwhelming reasons to attribute these
tables to New York rather than to New England: most have been found and
offered for sale by dealers in the Hudson River Valley; many are made
of red gum, a wood used as a cheap substitute for mahogany in New York,
but not in New England; and their turnings and leg-stock dimensions are
clearly related to those of documented New York examples with draw bars
and gate legs, but they bear little relation to those of 3 New England
tables.13
The tables with flat gates and trestle bases have tops that measure, on
average, about ten inches less in overall length and width than the tops
on their four-legged counterparts with draw-bar and gate-leg supports.
(The Johnson and Van Cortlandt tables are excluded from this calculation
because they are abnormally large.) Tops range in size from 36 1/8"
x 47 1/2" (fig. 17)
to 30" x 34 3/4" (fig. 22).
The smaller tables may have been used for tea or light meals, or as service
stations alongside grander, oval-topped dining tables; the larger ones
could comfortably seat four and may have served as the principal dining
table in some households.
The beauty of these tables is in their compactness and the ease with which
they can be moved and stored. With the leaves down they are seldom over
a foot wide (fig. 23). The
1724 room-by-room inventory of Gertruy Van Cortlandts home in New
York City suggests that she lived in a tall, two-storey, Dutch-style townhouse
and used one of the smaller trestle-base tables there. On the first floor
were an entry, front and back parlors, a closet, and a kitchen dependency.
Listed in the closet, not necessarily a closet as we think
of one today but a small room adjacent to or between the parlors, were
a total of nine pieces of earthenware, a stone jug, a whitewood chest,
a candlebox, and 1 ovall table.14
Major structural variations indicate that these tables represent the work
of several shops. (Paired versus single board stretchers [figs. 17,
24] and mortise-and-tenon
versus dovetail joints where the uprights meet the support structure of
the top.) The consistent use of mortise-and-tenon and dovetail joints
(fig. 23), suggest that
most were made by joiners rather than turners. The tables are workmanlike
and sturdy. The quality of their design and construction is superior to
most New England shoe-foot, trestle-base tables with falling leaves, which
typically have a turned stretcher joined higher up on the posts and vertically
oriented rails supporting the tops (as opposed to the flat rails on the
New York ones). Today, many of the New England examples are rickety and
unstable, a condition as much attributable to their original design and
construction as to their antiquity.
New York four-legged tables with flat gates (fig. 16)
are a curious blend of the classic design with trestle-base examples.
The end rails are like those on most four-legged tables, but the side
ones are unusual in being turned flat side down and lapped into the tops
of the legs so that they are nearly invisible and provide extra room for
knees. Unlike all but one other New York falling-leaf table with plain
box stretchers (fig. 7),
the stretchers on these tables are oriented so that their broadest surfaces
are in a vertical plane. This orientation relates well visually to the
framing members of the flat gates.
Though the tables with draw-bar supports evidently are a hybrid Anglo-Dutch
design, trestle-base tables with flat gates appear to be purely English
in derivation. (Chinnery illustrates several closely related examples
from England that he dates from the mid- to late-seventeenth century,
but nothing similar is known in Dutch furniture.)15 This indicates that unadulterated English joiners designs were also
popular among New Yorkers and makes the total lack of trestle-base tables
with flat gates and New England histories of ownership that much harder
to explain.
The Ornamental Elements of New York Tables with
Falling Leaves
The turnings on oval tables with falling leaves were meant to harmonize
with the sets of cane and leather chairs used with them and with other
late seventeenth- and early-eighteenth-century furniture forms. During
this period joiners and turners in America shared an Anglo-Dutch vocabulary
of turned ornament that consisted of compressed or elegantly drawn ogee
balusters, flat-topped urns, straight-sided tapered columns, smooth spheres
and ellipsoids, rings, reels, and twists. All of these profiles except
for the last are evident in an English cane armchair bearing the royal
cypher of James II (16851688) and his consort Mary Beatrice in its
crest (fig. 25). Less elaborately
carved but similar high-back chairs were imported by North American colonists,
and their turnings served as design sources for local joiners and turners
who could copy certain passages verbatim or pick and choose among the
various profiles to come up with inventive combinations that satisfied
their creative impulses and suited the tastes of their clientele.
In New York, that taste seems to have run toward complexity and exuberance.
Furniture historian Benno Forman pointed this out in his study of New
York leather chairs. He cited a group of indigenous plain-top, high-back
examples that are rather stiff in their stance but with wonderfully
elaborate turnings as proof that, despite the heavy importation
of Boston leather chairs, many New Yorkers preferred local variants. On
the issue of the relative Dutchness or Englishness of these New York chairs,
he was rightfully wary and noted a persistent problem with singling out
design influences on early New York furniture. He specifically warned
that such influences could come directly from Holland, or France,
or from England which had been influenced by Holland, or from Boston which
had been influenced by England, which had been influenced by Holland.16
The same problem exists for New York oval tables with falling leaves,
although it is possible to identify a precise design source for the turnings
on one subgroup of tables with draw-bar supports and possibly for the
twisted leg as executed in New York.
Wallace Nutting unknowingly described one distinctive attribute of early
baroque turnings in the caption he wrote for #943 in his Furniture Treasury
(see fig. 16): This
rare turning or something different from the conventional is usually found
with the trestle gate or the flat gate. By different from
the conventional Nutting meant different from the bilaterally symmetrical
ogee balusters found on many New England tables. New Yorkers showed a
more adventurous spirit in the selection and arrangement of the elements
used on table legs, opting for variety and visual complexity over symmetry.
This quality is manifest in seven patterns of turned legs on the tables
illustrated in this article: (1) twist (fig. 13);
(2) stacked ogee balusters (figs. 26,
27); (3) large ogee baluster
surmounted by a smaller, double-ended, compressed one with a short tapered
column above (fig. 28ac);
(4) short urn with a large ogee baluster above (fig. 29ac);
(5) double-ended compressed ogee baluster surmounted by a large, single-ended
one (fig. 22); (6) opposed
end-to-end ogee balusters (figs. 7,
17); and (7) single elongated
baluster (fig. 24).17
Certain consistencies among the patterns help to delineate a distinctive
New York early baroque turning style. Several tables have flattened ball-shape
feet, a well-defined reel on top of the lower leg blocks, and fat, full
rings. Also distinctive is a double-ended compressed balustersometimes
used above a large ogee baluster and sometimes belowthat looks a
little like an unfinished ball turning. The heavy leg stock and the visual
complexity and dynamism of baroque design work hand in glove; the turner
can exploit his reductive decorative techniques to the fullest and still
maintain axial mass and strength in the legs.18
Twisted legs (fig. 13) are
a rare feature in American furniture, found on only twenty surviving pieces:
five Cromwellian-style leather chairs from Boston and one from Philadelphia
or New York; two low-back chairs with board seats and twisted back spindles
from Philadelphia; two oval tables with falling leaves, one possibly from
New England and one from the South; and nine pieces of New York furniture,
including the five tables with draw-bar supports (figs. 11,
12), three high chests,
and one dressing table. Legs of this type are frequently said to be twist
turned, but this description is something of a misnomer since it incorrectly
implies that the twist is imparted in the turning process. The ball-shaped
foot, rings and reels, and the essential cylinder are all turned, but
the twist is formed with rasps and gouges while the leg blank is at rest
in the lathe. There it can be rotated by hand as the artisan works his
way around, guided by spiraling layout marks. Bringing a twisted leg to
finished smoothness was painstaking work that obviously meant a higher
sales price. All the New York examples are single twist, and all the New
England, Pennsylvania, and southern examples are double. Benno Forman
and Dutch scholar Jan Veenendaal both state that the single twist is more
continental European than English; Forman calls the design French, and
Veenendaal says that it is Dutch. Either way, it should not be surprising
that the single twist only shows up in New York where French Huguenots,
French-speaking Walloons, and Netherlandish furniture craftsmen and their
customers formed a large segment of the population in the late-seventeenth
and early-eighteenth centuries.19
Stacked ogee balusters (fig. 26)
are found only on furniture from New York and the South Carolina low country,
two areas with sizable populations of French Huguenots. The stacked balusters
appear most frequently on trestle-base tables with flat gates (fig. 3)
but are rare on those with turned gate legs and tables with draw-bar supports.20
In all but one instance (fig. 9),
the lower baluster in this stacked arrangement is shorter than the upper
one, a disposition that contrasts with modern perception that smaller
things should be stacked on larger ones but that is in perfect keeping
with the tenets of baroque design where the emphasis was on dramatic tension
and movement. With this seventeenth-century design principle in mind it
is easier to understand a composition in which the lower baluster is consciously
made squatter with a shorter neck to give it the appearance of being forced
into compression by the pendulous baluster above.
A single baluster surmounted by a compressed double-ended baluster (fig.
28) appears on a group
of tables with draw-bar supports made at Kingston in Ulster County (figs.
4, 10,
14). The apparent source
for this design was the turned-arm supports on carved-top Boston leather
armchairs like the one shown in figure 30
or in New York City versions of the same.21
It is easy to imagine the genesis of this design occurring when, around
1700, a Kingston-area joiner was commissioned to make an oval table with
falling leaves for use with a fine new set of Boston or New York City
carved-top leather chairs recently acquired by a local householder. The
turning, when expanded to table leg size, takes on an abstract quality
visible especially in the center leg in figure 28,
where each turned element looks as if it could be snatched from the stacked
column of shapes by a deft hand.
Of the four remaining turning patterns, the one most frequently associated
with New Yorkthanks almost exclusively to the renown of the Sir
William Johnson tableis the urn and baluster (fig. 29).
This pattern is directly traceable to seventeenth-century English oak
and walnut oval tables with falling leaves, and it appears as part of
the series of turnings on the stiles of the English cane chair shown in
figure 25. In American oval
tables with falling leaves, it is found in less than robust form on two
related mid-eighteenth-century examples from Maine and on a total of five
from New York (figs. 15,
1821).22
Three distinct variations of the urn and baluster are shown in figure
29. The most notable difference
among the three is the lack of the well-defined reel on top of the lower
block on the leg of the Sir William Johnson table (fig. 29,
far right), a prominent feature of the other two legs. This deletion may
indicate a drift away from the design tradition that spawned it. Otherwise,
the turnings on the Johnson table are beautifully executed, something
that should be expected from a first-rate New York City shop executing
a major commission.
The fifth turning patterna large ogee baluster over a compressed
double-ended oneis represented by the trestle-base table with flat
gates illustrated in figure 22.
The pattern also occurs on two other tables of the same form and on two
walnut tables with box stretchers and turned gate legs probably made in
New York City, but it is not found on any of the tables with draw-bar
supports. The turning is not exclusive to New York and is found both in
surviving architectural woodwork and freestanding furniture from southeastern
Massachusetts. An inverted version of this pattern occurs on a curly maple
table from Hempstead, Long Island, that has compressed double-ended balusters
over the large ogee balusters with the reel that normally sits on top
of the lower leg block nestled between them.23
Opposed ogee balusters on New York tablesturning pattern number
sixhave little except their general disposition in common with the
rhythmic, bilaterally symmetrical turnings of New England oval tables
with falling leaves. Only five New York examples with this leg turning
are known, two of which (figs. 7,
17) have multiple fat rings
at the top and bottom of the legs but otherwise appear to be unrelated.
A trestle-base table at Winterthur (acc. 58.527), one of the few New York
examples with turned gate legs, and another closely related table illustrated
in Lockwoods Colonial Furniture in America both have short, fullsome
ogee balusters with heavy filleted rings between them. The turnings on
figure 17 are similarly
configured but have much blunter looking rings that are generally similar
to the turned arm supports on a great, plain-top, New York leather armchair
at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, which Benno Forman believed to be
the most thoroughly Dutch of all surviving New York leather chairs.24
The seventh and final turning pattern, a simple elongated baluster, is
perhaps the least interesting visually (fig. 24).
It appears on eight tables, including seven with flat gates, two with
turned gates, and one with draw-bar leaf supports. Full-bottomed and drawn
out to a columnar form above, the turnings on the table in figure 24
lack the well-defined lower reel, an omission that suggests that it is
a fairly late example.25
Dating and Attributions to Makers and Locale
Not a single table discussed in this article can be assigned a precise
date, place of manufacture, or maker based on signatures, inscriptions,
or other documentary evidence. Traditionally, the method used for dating
anonymous or poorly documented early baroque oval tables with falling
leaves has been by the type of table-leaf joint employedthe tongue-and-groove
joint thought to be the earlier form, and the rule joint believed to be
the later one. This method was combined with that intangible quality so
many collectors, dealers, and students of early furniture use in formulating
their final subjective judgments on such mattersaspect. A measure
of validity is brought to this dating process if additional toe
holds are present, such as histories of ownership in a single family
or other datable design features. A few New York tables offer such documentation,
making dating slightly less subjective at least in a few instances.
One example of this dating method comes from the Johnson table (fig. 15),
which has rule joints with short, half-round sections of wood glued at
the table ends under the quarter-round section of the joints. This sophisticated
conceit, the source of which was probably English, occurs only in New
York in American work and appears with greatest frequency on late baroque
(fig. 31) and rococo tables
with falling leaves and cabriole legs. Another feature relating the Johnson
table to late baroque and rococo case furniture made in New York is its
drawer construction. (It is difficult to perceive the end drawers in the
tables current condition because the original bail handle drawer
pulls, which may have been similar in appearance to the type on the table
in figure 31, have been
removed and the post holes filled.) The secondary wood in the drawers
is yellow poplar; the drawer bottoms are chamfered on all four edges and
set into grooves; the top edges of the drawer sides and backs are softly
rounded; and there are neat miter joints at the top back corners that
echo the fine finish of the rule joints. The sophisticated rule joint
and aspects of the drawer construction push the date of manufacture for
the Johnson table toward 1750, and the circumstances of Johnsons
life tend to confirm this date as well. Johnson was born in Ireland in
1715 and came to New York in 1738 at the age of twenty-three. Between
1749 and 1763, he built three houses along the Mohawk River, each increasingly
grand to suit his growing prominence as an entrepreneur, politician, and
royal government official in charge of Indian affairs on New Yorks
western frontier.26
Although the rule joint can be used to shade the Sir William Johnson table
toward midcentury, the exact date that this joint was introduced in the
colonies is unknown. One of the earliest references to the joint is in
the account book of Newbury, Massachussetts, joiner Joseph Brown, Jr.,
who charged £3 for a table rule joynted in 1741. Thirteen
years later the joint is mentioned in the day book of New York City joiner
Joshua Delaplaine, who charged John Devine £1 for a bilstel
[red gum] Rule Joynt table 3 fot bed [frame]. Rule joints were listed
as an option in a 1757 Providence, Rhode Island, table of prices for joiners
work, which lists: Maple rule Joynt tables @ £6 Pr foot; old
fashen Joynts @ £5.10.27 The old fashen Joynts probably were tongue-and-groove, and
their listing as a less expensive option in 1757 cautions against dating
tables by their leaf joints alone.
A second table rich in family tradition is illustrated in figure 18.
Inset in the top is a brass plaque that delineates the tables descent
from Catherine Bedloe (bapt. May 22, 1664) of New York City. Bedloe, the
daughter of a Dutch merchant, married (n.d.) English merchant Thomas Howarding
sometime before 1693, when their daughter Margaret was baptized. She married
her second husband, wealthy Dutch New York surgeon Dr. Samuel Staats,
in 1707, and the table reportedly descended to her daughter Margaret,
perhaps as part of her dowry, when she married Robert Livingston, Jr.,
in 1717. From Margaret Livingston the table descended through several
generations to General Louis Fitzgerald, who inherited it in 1886 and
probably was the person responsible for chronicling the history and affixing
the plaque. Family histories are notoriously unreliable for dating furniture,
but in this instance the survival of an original 16901720 backplate
for a pendant drop and the tongue-and-groove leaf joints indicate that
the table belongs to the generations of Catherine Bedloe or her daughter
Margaret Howarding. Also, although it is possible that this style of drawer
pull could have been used in the 1730s or 1740s, it is unlikely given
the wealth and status of its original owners, who would have wanted hardware
as up-to-date as possible.28
The original wrought iron hinges (fig. 32) are of a type termed butterfly
hinge today, but in shop jargon of the period may simply have been called
dovetail.29
On several New York tables, the dovetail hinges are fastened by a combination
of rosehead nails and a single rivet peened over on both ends. The rosehead
nails are short and do not pierce the face of the table top; the rivet
also passes only partially through, its countersunk head camouflaged by
a face-grain plug (fig. 33).
The source of this riveted hinge detail is unknown, but it appears with
great regularity on New York tables with pivot legs and draw bars.
A table from the Verplanck family is another example with tongue-and-groove
leaf joints that can be dated to the first quarter of the eighteenth century.
It and three carved-top Boston leather chairs (fig. 21)
were donated to Washingtons Headquarters between 1858 and 1872.
In the 1882 Catalogue of Manuscripts and Relics in Washingtons
Head-Quarters, they were described as being the altar furniture
of the Reformed Dutch Church at Fishkill, brought from Holland by the
Verplanck family in 1682. Although the Verplancks probably provided
the church furniture, the overall design and secondary woods of these
pieces indicate that they were made in New York rather than in Holland.
Moreover, they are stylistically related and probably were made within
a very short time of one another. If so, they are a rare survival, graphically
demonstrating the decorative harmony between the turnings on tables and
chairs alluded to earlier.30
Attributions to makers and locale are similarly handicapped by the lack
of documented examples. Logic dictates that some of these tables came
from New York City shops, particularly those made of mahogany and black
walnut, woods that had to be imported from the South. The tables made
of these expensive woods appear to be the work of several different shops.
Those illustrated in figures 15
and 20 and those in 18
and 19 represent the work
of two different New York City shops because of their closely related
turnings and because of the sophisticated rule joints on the former pair
and the original use of oak pegs for the mortise-and-tenon joints on the
latter pair. It is also conceivable that the Van Cortlandt family table
(fig. 2) represents an earlier
generation of the shop tradition that spawned the Johnson table (fig.
15).
New York City furniture tradesmen in the late-seventeenth and early-eighteenth
centuries had northern European and English names. Joiners (the tradesmen
responsible for these tables) who were active between 1695 and 1727 included
John Le Chevalier, Edward Hunt, Robert and Peter White, Edward Burling,
Joshua Delaplaine, James and Daniel Gautier, John Kinder, Joseph Kingston,
Thomas Grigg, Andrew Brested, Thomas and Jonathan Gleaves, Joseph Diviat,
John Sibley, and Richard Berry. The account books of Joshua Delaplaine
reveal that he made tables throughout his career (fl. 1718ca. 1771).
In a series of six separate transactions between 1721 and 1727, Delaplaine
made tables ranging in value from 15s. to £1.11.0 in exchange for
tools, hardware, fabrics, and other sundries that he acquired from Edward
Burling, a Quaker joiner who became a freeman in 1683 and probably worked
until his death in 1753. Burling undoubtedly resold the tables, all of
which were probably made in the early baroque style. In 1753 Delaplaine
made a mahogany Dining table 5 foot 3 In. bed, 8 legs, 2 draws
for Elias Desbrosses and charged him £8.10.0. This table, on the
other hand, could have resembled the relatively late Johnson table (fig. 15) or the eight-legged
table shown in figure 31,
or it could even have had modish new cabriole legs with ball-and-claw
feet. Like Burling, Delaplaine was a Quaker. He took at least one Quaker
apprentice (his first), Francis Warne. His business relationships with
Friends extended well beyond New York, for he entered into a sales arrangement
for two desks and a tea table with Newport cabinetmaker Christopher Townsend
in 1745. Little attention has been given to the Quaker strain in New York
furniture, but there is something about the precision and obsessive attention
to detail in features like the barrel-shaped rule joint and the mitred
top back corners of the drawers in the Johnson table and other eighteenth-century
New York City case furniture that, though having no direct relationship
to the furniture of Newport Quakers, is reminiscent of the quality and
level of refinement apparent in John Townsends labeled work. Burling,
Delaplaine, and the many apprentices they trained could have been responsible
for high-quality New York City furniture of this sort, and they were tradesmen
worthy of greater scrutiny than that applied in this study.31
If the Johnson table possibly represents an Anglo-Quaker strain, the tables
with draw-bar leaf supports, especially the walnut and red gum examples
illustrated in figures 11
and 12, are more indicative
of a northern European tradition. The walnut table is almost certainly
city made, and the other table, although made of red gum, probably qualifies
for the same distinction. The Delaplaine account books show that bilsted
or red gum was a common commodity in New York City. What really sets the
red gum table apart as the mature product of a talented urban craftsman
are its well planned and excellently proportioned legs, which taper slightly
in thickness from the bottom to the top (fig. 13).
Beginning around 1700, the draw-bar version of the early baroque oval
table with falling leaves found expression in the Kingston area (Ulster
County) of the Hudson River Valleythe only locale that has yielded
enough related tables with histories to allow the identification of a
distinct school outside of New York City. Of the eight tables attributed
to this area, six have turnings derived from the arm supports of Boston
and New York City carved-top leather chairs of the late 1690s and early
1700s (figs. 4, 10,
14) and the other two have
cone-like, stubby columns at the topdetails characteristic of the
Ulster County school. One of the tables with twisted legs and a tradition
of ownership in the Elmendorf family of Hurley (just outside of Kingston)
could also be locally made given its history and the presence of these
same short, tapered columns at the top of its rather horsey-looking, single-twist
legs.32
The dominant shop tradition for the Ulster County region centered at Kingston
and was presided over for generations by the Beekman and Elting families,
beginning with Jan Elting (16321729) in 1672 and continuing into
the nineteenth century with Thomas Beekman (17611814). The Elting-Beekman
joiners made kasten of a consistent design for their principally
Dutch and Huguenot customers from at least 1700 until after the Revolution,
and evidence suggests they produced early baroque oval tables with falling
leaves as well. The ogee moldings on the rails and stretchers of the tables
match those used in the central sections of the massive kast cornices,
and on the draw-bar table illustrated in figure 10,
the end drawers are constructed (except for the lack of channeled sides)
like those in the kasten (fig. 34).33
The working dates of the Elting-Beekman shop (fl. ca. 16721814)
and the persistence of early baroque designs in Ulster County suggest
that some of these eight tables may be earlier than others. Of the three
tables included in this article (figs. 4,
10, 14),
only the one illustrated in figure 14
has rule joints, and it appears to be the latest. This table also differs
from the other two in having rails and stretchers with edge beading similar
to the quirk and bead moldings found on late-eighteenth-century interior
woodwork rather than ogee moldings. Its large baluster turnings are slightly
drawn out at the neck and look a little flacid in comparison to those
on the other two tables (figs. 4,
10). Aspect alone suggests
that the table shown in figure 4 is the earliest. The legs are stouter (measuring 2 3/4" square),
the baluster is full and strongly compressed, and the reel element is
slightly taller than on either of the other Ulster County tables. In the
end, however, it probably matters little which table predates the other.
What these tables gloriously represent is a taste for bold, early baroque
design, nurtured by a conservative, non-Anglo society throughout a century
when many other New Yorkers successively embraced the late baroque, rococo,
and early neoclassical styles. The table illustrated in figure 10
probably dates to the mid 1700s and is a wonderfully appealing object
expressive of the culture that produced it. This object can stand on its
own aesthetic merits regardless of the date it was made.
New York early baroque furniture has its admirers, many of whom believe
that it is bolder in outline and more vigorous and diverse in its turned
ornament than contemporary New England work. The early baroque New York
oval tables with falling leaves examined here will strengthen this conviction
for some and might even win a few converts. More importantly, however,
they provide, in the absence of written documents, the only record of
the forms development in New York. Tables of purely English design
with turned and flat gates reveal that some New Yorkers looked to England
and Boston for the latest furniture forms and fashions. These New Yorkers
would at first have been primarily of English extraction, or were non-Anglos
who stood to gain from outward displays of allegiance to their new rulers.
Conversely, the tables with draw bars suggest that there was a significant
segment of New York society intrigued by English fashion but still reluctant
to abandon completely their traditional European furniture forms and design
aesthetic. The draw-bar table probably fell out of favor in New York City
by 1740 as English culture became dominant, but it remained popular among
the conservative, non-Anglo population of Ulster County, where it fell
comfortably into the rhythm of rural life until the time of the Revolution.
This is what places the form squarely in the canon of objects described
as New York Dutch material culture. Included in this canon is the kast,
which, it can be argued, is quintessentially Dutch. The draw-bar table,
on the other hand, is not. Instead it is a wonderful hybrid that physically
manifests Anglo-Dutch cultural blending in early colonial New York.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank the following individuals for their kind assistance
in the preparation of this article: Gavin Ashworth, Luke Beckerdite, Frank
Cowan, Constance and Dudley Godfrey, Roger Gonzalez, Rich Goring, Tammis
Groft, John Hays, Bill Hosley, Tom Hughes, Kate Johnson, Mel Johnson,
Leslie Stratton-Le Fevre, Bill Lohrman, Johanna McBrien, Alan Miller,
Bill Orser, Jonathan Prown, Frances Safford, Bob Slater, Robert Trent,
Anne and Fred Vogel, Deborah Waters, Jack and Mary Ellen Whistance, and
Martin Wunsch.
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