A FEDERAL EAGLE-INLAID MAHOGANY CANDLESTAND
A FEDERAL EAGLE-INLAID MAHOGANY CANDLESTAND
A FEDERAL EAGLE-INLAID MAHOGANY CANDLESTAND
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A FEDERAL EAGLE-INLAID MAHOGANY CANDLESTAND
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A FEDERAL EAGLE-INLAID MAHOGANY CANDLESTAND

NEW YORK, 1795-1810

Details
A FEDERAL EAGLE-INLAID MAHOGANY CANDLESTAND
NEW YORK, 1795-1810
29 ¼ in. high, 22 in. wide, 21 ½ in. deep
Provenance
Sold, Sotheby's, New York, 15 October 1999, lot 62
The Westervelt Company, Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Literature
Tom Armstrong, Amy Coes, Ella Foshay, and Wendell Garrett, An American Odyssey: The Warner Collection of Fine and Decorative Arts (New York, 2001), pp. 160-161.
Sale room notice
This lot is now offered with no reserve.

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Sallie Glover
Sallie Glover

Lot Essay


One of the most popular symbols of the Federal Period, the bald eagle became associated with the new Republic upon its incorporation into the Great Seal of the United States in 1782. This candlestand depicts a bald eagle sitting on an olive branch bearing a shield with thirteen stripes and holding a scroll with sixteen stars. The eagle is also surrounded by sixteen stars. This inlay possibly commemorates the statehood of Tennessee, the sixteenth state, in 1796 (Tom Armstrong, Amy Coes, Ella Foshay, and Wendell Garrett, An American Odyssey: The Warner Collection of Fine and Decorative Arts (New York, 2001), pp. 160-161).

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