A GEORGE III MAHOGANY BUREAU-CABINET
A GEORGE III MAHOGANY BUREAU-CABINET

MID-18TH CENTURY

Details
A GEORGE III MAHOGANY BUREAU-CABINET
MID-18TH CENTURY
The broken arched pediment centered with a plumed cartouche supported by a mask above a pair of resilvered mirror-paneled doors revealing shelves over candle-rests, the two section lower case with slant front opening to a tooled leather writing-surface, document recess, pigeon-holes and mahogany-lined drawers surrounding a prospect door flanked by parcel-gilt document compartments, over a long drawer, two aligned drawers and two graduated drawers on bracket feet, handles probably original
102½ in. (260.5 cm.) high, 42 in. (107 cm.) wide, 24¼ in. (61 cm.) deep
Provenance
Joseph John Gurney (1788-1847), Earlham Hall, Norwich, England and by descent to his wife
Eliza Paul (Kirkbride) Gurney (1801-after 1881), England and West Hill, New Jersey and by descent to her great-niece
Harriet Kirkbride Howell (d. after 1905) and by descent in the family.
Anonymous sale; Christie's, New York, 19 October 2000, lot 262.

Lot Essay

According to a note dated 1905 that was previously adhered to the desk's interior, this desk was owned by Joseph John Gurney (1788-1847) of Earham Hall near Norwich. The son of John Gurney, a successful banker and member of the Society of Friends, Joseph Gurney became a prominent Quaker minister and reformer. He pioneered several campaigns against societal injustices, including prison conditions, capital punishment and slavery. He traveled extensively and in the course of an anti-slavery campaign, visited America where he met his wife, Eliza Paul Kirkbride (1801-after 1881), a fellow Quaker minister. The couple married in England in 1841 and after his death in 1847, she moved back to America and as the note states, brought this desk with her.

Like her husband, Eliza P. Gurney was an ardent reformer and upon the outbreak of the Civil War became a spokesperson for her sect's drive for peace. In 1862, she visited President Lincoln to plead her cause and impressed with her views, he later requested her advice through letters. Writing from her home, and possibly on the desk offered here, she wrote several letters to the President, one of which was in his breast pocket when he was assassinated. Eliza Gurney died childless and after her death, the desk passed down in the family of her sister, Harriet (Kirkbride) Howell. Owner of the desk in 1905, Harriet's grand-daughter and namesake wrote the note describing the desk's history (Mott, ed.,Memoir and Correspondence of Eliza P. Gurney, Philadelphia, 1884).

More from Important English Furniture and Ceramics

View All
View All