Erik Kyle Gronning and Dennis Andrew Carr
Early Rhode Island Turning

Driven primarily by the marketplace, the majority of twentieth-century Rhode Island furniture scholarship has focused on the late baroque and rococo styles. Although the admiration bestowed on these objects is justified, it has left a chasm in the study of that colony’s early furniture. As noted by Robert Blair St. George and Robert Trent, this lapse is further exacerbated by the limited amount of seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century furniture that survives. A recent study by the authors has identified an important group of Rhode Island gateleg tables (see fig. 1) and shown how elements of their design were adapted to later furniture forms. This article elaborates on this research and examines the origin of the turning designs, the architectural prototypes, the breadth and diversity of objects made, and the probability of multiple makers.1

Irving W. Lyon was the first scholar to illustrate an example of what is now considered a classic Rhode Island turning in his seminal book The Colonial Furniture of New England (1891). A decade later, Frances Clary Morse published a gateleg table from that colony in Furniture of the Olden Time. Neither Lyon nor Morse, however, ascribed these objects to a particular area. It was not until 1950 that Albert Sack attributed this turning pattern to Rhode Island in Fine Points of Furniture.2

Rhode Island tables differ significantly from those made in the other New England colonies, which typically have legs with symmetrical turnings (figs. 2, 3). An antecedent for this symmetrical design is found on plate 94 in Augustin-Charles d’Aviler’s (1653–1701) Cours d’architecture qui comprend les ordres de Vignole (1691) (fig. 4). Mirrored balusters were occasionally described as double poire, or “double pear.” During the first half of the eighteenth century, craftsmen working along Narragansett Bay developed alternatives to this archetypal design. The origins of these patterns are unknown, but similar baluster shapes and arrangements occur in late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century British furniture and interior architecture (fig. 5).3

Recent research has established links between Rhode Island furniture turnings and related architectural work. In an earlier volume of American Furniture Luke Beckerdite pointed out similarities between turned balusters from the Seventh Day Baptist Meeting House in Newport (fig. 6) and those on regional gateleg tables. Although the balusters from the meetinghouse and similar examples salvaged from the Governor Coddington House (fig. 7) are not exact cognates for the furniture turnings under discussion, they do have individual elements handled in much the same way. Most notably, the upper sections of the architectural turnings have attenuated balusters of the same basic shape as those on the gates of several Rhode Island tables. The architectural turnings lack the intricate moldings that separate the balusters and lower spherical turnings on many tables, but that does not eliminate the possibility that some are products of the same shop or turning tradition. The architectural turnings from the Seventh Day Baptist Meeting House and Coddington House may be slightly later than some of the tables.4

The stair balusters in the Wanton-Lyman-Hazard House (figs. 810) are among the earliest architectural turnings from Newport. More important, they relate closely to the legs on a Newport table (fig. 11) that belonged to William Floyd (1734–1821) of Brookhaven, Long Island. Given the fact that the Floyd family had resided in Setauket since the mid–seventeenth century, it is likely that the table arrived in Long Island soon after its construction. The repetitive nature of the eighteenth-century turner’s trade lent itself to the production of standard forms that were easily adaptable to various architectural and furniture components. As the balusters in the Wanton-Lyman-Hazard House and those on the Floyd table reveal, turners often used the same basic designs for both furniture and architectural work.5

Rhode Island Gateleg Tables: The Development of a Regional School of Turning
Most of the known Rhode Island gateleg tables can be divided into three groups based on their turnings and construction (see fig. 12). Group one consists of eight examples with complex leg turnings. The balusters of the legs have spherical bases with abrupt transitions to tall slender necks, and seven of these tables have two different ring turnings at the top. Only two of these tables have relevant histories. One descended in the Easton family of Newport, and the other (fig. 13) in the Alden-Southworth-Cooke family of Little Compton and Newport. The latter table is strikingly similar to the one illustrated in figure 1; even the drawer knobs are virtually identical (fig. 14).6

The construction of tables in the first group is consistent but relatively generic. Drawers are supported on runners attached to the side rails, drawer fronts are secured at each side with a single large dovetail (fig. 15), top boards are pinned to the side rails, and gates pivot from the same end of the table. Tables from Britain and New York occasionally exhibit this gate arrangement.7

Of all the gateleg tables in the first group, the example illustrated in figure 1 is in the best condition. Its feet have minimal wear, and most of the original black paint survives on the base. The legs are made of laminated boards (fig. 16), a rare detail in colonial American furniture. Because the turner glued up the stock from boards of different sizes, the joints are not centered. Furniture makers often laminated stock to avoid removing excess waste or to compensate for lack of materials. Neither scenario is completely satisfactory in explaining the laminated legs of this table because the turning cross-sections are relatively uniform and there was an abundance of maple, the table’s primary wood, in New England.8

The table illustrated in figure 17 is included in the first group, even though its stationary legs have balusters with a single, pronounced ring turning on the neck (fig. 18). The molding sequence below its balusters, however, is similar to that on other tables in the first group and its construction and gate arrangement are identical. Of all the tables in group one, the turnings on this example are the most exaggerated. The rings on the necks of the balusters are broad with sharp torus moldings, and the upper and lower necks of the spherical turnings below the balusters are unusually long. In both execution and conception they differ significantly from the more academic turnings on the tables shown in figures 1 and 13.

The second group of gateleg tables is composed of four examples (see fig. 19) with turnings that are simpler than those of group one (see fig. 12). The lower sections of the balusters are more compressed, there is a single ring on the neck, and the molding sequence separating the baluster from the spherical turning below consists of a distorted cavetto over a conventional astragal. Structural differences include the use of a central drawer runner, a conventional gate arrangement, and pins driven through the top into the upper stiles of the stationary legs. Like the tables in the first group, those in group two have drawer fronts secured with a single large dovetail at each side and hinges that do not extend under the sides of the frame (fig. 20). This eliminated the need to notch the side rails as was done on many colonial gateleg tables.9

The stationary legs on tables in the third group have baluster turnings with a more conventional shape, displaying a gradual sweep from the base to the neck (fig. 21). These tables have gates that pivot at the same end and moldings below the balusters similar to those in group one, central drawer supports like tables in group two, and drawer dovetailing and hinge placement consistent with both groups.10

Two other gateleg tables can be considered part of this regional school, but neither can be associated with a known group. The turnings on the table illustrated in figure 22, in particular the shallow ring on the neck (fig. 23) and distinctive ball feet, are unlike those on other Rhode Island examples (see fig. 1). The leg turnings on the table, however, are nearly identical to the back post turnings of a bannister-back side chair attributed to Rhode Island (fig. 24). Both objects also have remarkably similar stretchers. The table has been altered significantly, and the drawer replaces what was originally a simple end rail with a molded lower edge.11

The other Rhode Island gateleg table made without a drawer (fig. 25) bears no relation to the altered one (fig. 22). The large torus on the upper leg squares and pronounced single ring on the column are idiosyncratic, as are the form and placement of the hinges. The maker used crude wrought-iron straps (fig. 26) rather than the conventional rectangular or butterfly hinges found on other Rhode Island examples and attached them to the underside of the top inside the frame. This location helped compensate for the weakness of the thin straps. The maker may have been unable to obtain imported hardware or simply preferred the products of a local blacksmith.12

Related Furniture Forms
Several tables and stools have turning sequences that match those found on Rhode Island gateleg tables. The legs of the small stool illustrated in figure 27 relate directly to those on tables in group one, but the maker eliminated the lower spherical element to compensate for the difference in height. Three other stools with similar turnings are known. Another related example has a spherical turning at the bottom (fig. 28). Turners often used similar designs for architectural components and the legs of tables and stools, adding or subtracting elements to accommodate the size, function, and context of the finished product.13

A number of rectangular tables (figs. 29, 30) can be linked with the examples constituting group two. Like the gateleg tables, the rectangular forms have balusters with ball-shaped bottoms and similar moldings separating them from the spherical turning below. Another trait common among the small tables is a V-shaped astragal on the neck of the baluster.14

The table illustrated in figure 31 is from group three, and, as with nearly all Rhode Island examples of this form, each of its legs splays outward, canting in only one direction. Only two tables and a stool with legs canted in two directions are known. The oval-top table illustrated in figure 32 has turnings that are reminiscent of those on the gateleg examples in group three, but the upper ring turning on its balusters is unusual and its dome feet have an added fillet. All of the double-canted forms have identical feet and similar transitions from the upper and lower turnings into the leg squares. These objects may constitute an entirely separate group.15

Variations from the Standard
The gateleg tables and related forms discussed above document the emergence and development of a Rhode Island school of turning; however, regional styles were rarely monolithic. Several tables attributed to that colony differ significantly from those in or on the periphery of the standard subgroups. The table illustrated in figure 33 has stationary legs with symmetrical balusters separated by a thin V-shaped torus molding; thus the mass of the turning is located in the center of the design rather than at the bottom. It does, however, have balusters with a relatively sharp break at the neck and shares some construction features with the examples in the second group.16

Two additional gateleg tables (figs. 34, 35), a trestle table (fig. 36), and a small group of candlestands (fig. 37) have related turnings. The V-shaped astragal molding separating the baluster turnings on the stand is identical to those in the same position on the legs of the gateleg table frame illustrated in figure 34. Cross-base candlestands and trestle tables are usually associated with Massachusetts and Connecticut; thus it is plausible that these objects were made in the border areas of Rhode Island.17

Another variant of the opposing baluster design can be observed on the gateleg table illustrated in figure 38. With precise and delicate turnings, it is the most refined example of this genre. The turnings are reminiscent of those on the gateleg table illustrated in figure 33, but the elements are more in scale with the form. Aside from the two dovetails joining the drawer front and sides, the construction is similar to that of tables in group two. Although the table illustrated in figure 38 is somewhat idiosyncratic, it could easily be an urban product. A sophisticated candlestand that reputedly descended in a Rhode Island family has similar turnings (fig. 39). With its scroll legs, octagonal top, and pendant drop, this stand represents the pinnacle of the baroque design and fashion in Rhode Island furniture.18

The school of turning covered in this study reflects the work of a core group of furniture craftsmen and other regional artisans influenced by them. Surprisingly, few references to turners occur in early eighteenth-century Rhode Island records, and none are listed in Newport documents from this period. A few tradesmen described as “turners” were active in other areas of Rhode Island including King’s County (present-day Washington County) in the colonial period. The 1727 inventory of Judah Wordin (d. 1727) of Westerly lists carpenters’ and turners’ tools, but like many rural artisans he probably performed a variety of woodworking activities, such as joinery, chair making, and turning, as well as doing seasonal farming. It is doubtful that many of the turned tables in the Rhode Island school were produced in rural areas, as nonurban craftsmen rarely achieved the production levels or had sufficient long-term patronage and stylistic sophistication to account for this large group of furniture. Rather, the artisans who produced these table, stool, stand, and architectural turnings were probably among the many joiners and house carpenters listed in the records of Newport and other Rhode Island towns. Period documents describe Reuben Peckham (1676–1736) of Newport and East Greenwich, Rhode Island, as a joiner, but he did turning as well. The 1736 inventory of his East Greenwich shop lists joiners’ tools, two workbenches, unfinished case furniture, “1 Leath [lathe] and turning tools,” “1 grindstone,” and “Sundry Table Legs.” His household goods included three oval tables, one described as “small.” The executors of Peckham’s estate sold the small table for £1.11 in May 1737. The oval tables were probably gateleg forms or simpler four-leg examples without folding leaves. Similarly, recent scholarship suggests that the renowned Newport furniture maker Christopher Townsend (1701–1787) made turned and joined tables, stair balusters and pendants, and architectural paneling as well as ambitious case furniture.19

Given the fact that it represents the work of several different hands, the Rhode Island school of turning is remarkably cohesive. It is likely that many factors contributed to the development and persistence of this regional style. As a group, the colony’s inhabitants differed from their counterparts in other areas of New England. During the seventeenth century, Rhode Island became a destination for Quakers escaping persecution in England and Massachusetts. Religious strictures against marriage outside their faith and social pressures emphasizing the support of other Quakers facilitated the establishment of family businesses and patronage networks. Given the fact that many Quaker artisans were linked through marriage, apprenticeship, or business, it should come as no surprise that strong regional styles emerged in several areas of Rhode Island. A desire for commercial independence from Massachusetts may also have been an influence. In a 1739 letter to John Thomlinson of London, Newport merchant John Bannister wrote that the residents of his town desired “to make themselves independent of the Bay Government to whom they have a mortal aversion.” The stylistic independence manifest in the Rhode Island school of turning foreshadowed what was to come. By the time Bannister wrote his letter, Newport furniture makers had developed innovative construction methods and established alliances with merchants and shippers that would enable them to compete with their counterparts in Boston and other northern ports.20