Aitken side chair
Just weeks before his second term as President ended in March 1797, Washington purchased "2 doz chairs & 2 sideboards" from Philadelphia cabinetmaker John Aitken. Washington shipped the stylish furniture to Mount Vernon, where it graced his newest and most public room, the two-story dining room. This well-proportioned side chair, one of the twenty-four from Aitken, superbly complements the grand space, which Washington lavishly adorned with neoclassical architectural motifs. The chair's delicately carved, elliptic-cornered square back with urn splat derives from designs by the English furniture designer Thomas Sheraton (1751-1806), while its square, tapered front legs also appear on chairs made by his contemporary, George Hepplewhite (1727-1786). Brass tacks in a swag pattern punctuate the seat's tight curves and highlight its sumptuous green silk damask cover.
Published ReferencesCarol Borchert Cadou, The George Washington Collection: Fine and Decorative Arts at Mount Vernon (New York: Hudson Hills Press, 2006), 182-83.
James C. Rees, Treasures from Mount Vernon: George Washington Revealed, 1999, 85.
Christine Meadows, "The Furniture," Antiques, no. 135, no. 2 (February 1989): 483-85, pl. VII.
Jonathan L. Fairbanks, and Elizabeth Bidwell Bates, American Furniture: 1620 to the Present (New York: Richard Marek Publishers, 1981), 203
Helen Maggs Fede, Washington Furniture at Mount Vernon (Mount Vernon, VA; MVLA, 1966), 60, 60-65, fig. 49.
Marian S. Carson, "Washington Furniture at Mount Vernon, II: The Banquet Hall," American Collector 16, no. 4 (May 1947): 6-7, fig. 2.
William Macpherson Homor,, Jr. The Blue Book of Philadelphia Furniture (Philadephia: 1935), 241.