A RENAISSANCE REVIVAL CARVED OAK ARMCHAIR

ATTRIBUTED TO BEMBE AND KIMMEL, NEW YORK, OR HAMMITT DESK MFG. CO., PHILADELPHIA, CIRCA 1857

Details
A RENAISSANCE REVIVAL CARVED OAK ARMCHAIR
attributed to bembe and kimmel, new york, or hammitt desk mfg. co., philadelphia, circa 1857
The horizontal molded crestrail centering a carved shield motif above a padded back flanked by scrolled and leaf-carved stiles continuing to padded arms on scroll-carved arm supports over a padded seat with guilloche and diamond carved seatrail, on vase-shaped legs with rope and stylized leaf carving fitted with castors
40½in. high

Lot Essay

This chair is one of a set of 262 commissioned in 1857 for the newly-renovated chamber of the House of Representatives in the U.S. Capitol. The interior renovations were part of architect Thomas U. Walter's extensive expansion of the Capitol building from 1851 to 1865. Designed by Quartermaster-General Montgomery C. Meigs, the chairs were manufactured by both the Bembe and Kimmel company of New York and the Hammitt Desk Mfg. Co. of Philadelphia. This chair is identical to two others (one sold in these Rooms, June 22, 1994, lot 277 and the other sold in these Rooms, October 21, 1994, lot 95); all three can be attributed to the same company, either Bembe and Kimmel or Hammitt Desk Mfg. Co. Two additional chairs represent the work of the other company and feature minor variations in the proportions of the shield in the crest rail, the shape of the top of the stiles, and the treatment of the molded armsupports and handholds (one sold in these Rooms, January 25, 1986, lot 360 and the other, in the collection of the Henry Ford Museum is illustrated in Robert Bishop, Centuries and Styles of the American Chair 1640-1970 (New York, 1972), p.395, fig. 690).

In 1859 the House of Representatives sold these chairs at public auction where several were purchased by the well-known Washington photographers Mathew Brady and Alexander Gardner for use in portraits. In 1860, Brady photographed Abraham Lincoln seated in one of the latter chairs (Bishop, p.394, fig.687).