A FEDERAL CHERRYWOOD SIDECHAIR

Details
A FEDERAL CHERRYWOOD SIDECHAIR
DEERFIELD REGION, MASSACHUSETTS, 1785-1810

The canted back with double arch-and-point crest with scrolled
ears above two conforming splats and double arched carved stay rail over a rush slip seat with exposed corners, on straight legs with beaded outer edges joined by H-stretchers with a single rear stretcher (one corner of the slip seat is replaced; repair to right stile at at joint with seat rail)--37 1/2in. high, 19 1/4in. wide, 14 5/8in. deep

Lot Essay

This chair is inscribed with four chisel marks on the slip seat frame, which identifies it as part of a larger set. Three identical chairs from a second set are in the collection of Historic Deerfield, and were owned by the Williams family of Deerfield in the late 18th century (Philip Zea, "The Emergence of Neoclassical Furniture Making in Rural Western Massachusetts," Antiques, (December, 1992), pp.
842-851). For a fifth chair, see Wallace Nutting, Furniture Treasury, vol. II, (New York, 1948), fig. 2259.