A CARVED OAK ARMCHAIR

Details
A CARVED OAK ARMCHAIR
ATTRIBUTED TO BEMBE AND KIMMEL, NEW YORK, CIRCA 1857

The horizontal molded crestrail centering a carved shield above a padded back and trapezoidal seat flanked by acanthus carved stiles continuing to padded arm rests and serpentine scrolled arm supports above a carved seatrail with a circular motif with star-carved rounded outset corners, on vase shaped lotus carved legs--39in. high

Lot Essay

This chair is believed to be one of 262 chairs commissioned by Congress and designed by Quartermanster-General Montgomery C. Meigs for use in the chamber of House of Representatives in 1857.

In 1859, the House of Representatives sold these chairs at public auction where several were purchased by well known Washington photographers Mathew Brady and Alexander Gardner for use in portraits. In 1860, Brady photographed Abraham Lincoln seated in one of these chairs. This portrait as well as another chair from the House of Representatives is now in the Henry Ford Museum and is illustrated in Bishop, Centuries and Styles of the American Chair (New York, 1972). p. 395, figs 687 and 690.

A nearly identical chair sold in these Rooms, January 25, 1986, lot 360 and June 22, 1994, lot 77.