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Bier

Bier
Possible maker:  Henry or Joseph Ingle
Walnut
1790-1800
Bier
Bier
Possible maker:  Henry or Joseph Ingle
Walnut
1790-1800
Bier Possible maker: Henry or Joseph Ingle Walnut 1790-1800
Photograph by Dennis McWaters
Status
On view
Label Text

After breathing his last on December 14, 1799, George Washington was buried four days later, in the old family tomb. Alexandria cabinetmakers Henry and Joseph Ingle built Washington’s coffin and leased a bier, coach, and horse for its conveyance. This bier is similar to that used in Washington’s funeral procession. Its pierced brackets and molded legs and rails resemble similar elements on fashionable chairs and tables of the day. When raised, the hinged shoulder rests enabled pallbearers to more comfortably transport the heavy burden it supported.

In his will, George Washington requested a private interment “without — parade, or funeral Oration.” Unable to let his death pass unhonored, his family members arranged a relatively modest funeral by the standards of the day. Alexandria cabinetmakers Henry and Joseph Ingle built Washington’s coffin and leased a bier, coach, and horse for its conveyance. This bier is similar to that used in Washington’s funeral procession. Its pierced brackets and molded legs and rails resemble similar elements on fashionable chairs and tables of the day. When raised, the hinged shoulder rests enabled pallbearers to more comfortably transport the heavy burden it supported.

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Date1785-1800
Possible maker (American)
Geography Probably made - United States
Medium/TechniqueWalnut, paint, iron
DimensionsOverall: 27 1/8 in. x 118 5/8 in. x 33 3/4 in. (68.9 cm x 301.31 cm x 85.73 cm)
Credit LinePurchase, 2001
Object numberW-4223
DescriptionBrown painted or stained bier with collapsing arms on four square, tapered legs, molded on their front and beaded on their back corners with pierced knee brackets. The S-curved and shaped arms have circular arm terminals that are inscribed with a single line around the outer and inner faces. The side rails are molded on their outside faces (the sides of the arms are plain), and the ends of each are shaped to match the size of the arms. Several cross rails join the two principal side rails of the bier: a central rail pierced with an abstract eye or a circle within a pointed oval; four pairs of rails, in which the two rails facing the central rail are horizontally reeded on that face; two pairs of plain rails (one is missing on one set). Plugged slots testify to the original placement of a single medial rail at the ends of each side rail, just before the hinged arms. Each pair of legs is connected with a stretcher pierced with a central diamond flanked by elongated ovals and beaded on their top and bottom edges.

The arms are joined to the side rails with iron hinges screwed onto the underside of both. The legs are tenoned into the side rails and single-pegged. The stretchers are tenoned into the legs and nailed in place. The brackets are glued in place and screwed in at their bases. The outer three medial rails on each side are joined to the side rails with sliding dovetails, while the inner pairs with the reeded rail and the central rail simply slide into a rectilinear slot.


Published ReferencesSumpter Priddy III and Ann Steuart, “Seating Furniture from the District of Columbia, 1795-1820,” American Furniture 2010 (Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Chipstone Foundation, Inc., 2010), 87-88.
Mount Vernon's object research is ongoing and information about this object is subject to change. For information on image use and reproductions, click here.
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