Candlestand
George Washington purchased these candlestands for £ 3.10 on December 2, 1759 from the Scottish cabinetmaker James Allan of Fredericksburg, Virginia. Rising from an ingenious combination of C-scrolls and acanthus leaves, these fashionable stands enabled candles to be elevated and placed around the room for illumination. Washington would likely have utilized them in the West Parlor or Small Dining Room at Mount Vernon, the showpieces of his newly expanded and renovated home. They were placed in the New Room after its completion in 1788 and continued in use until Washington's death in 1799.
Published ReferencesTara Gleason Chicirda, "The Furniture of Fredericksburg, Virginia, 1740-1820," American Furniture (Milwaukee: The Chipstone Foundation, 2006), 99-101.
Morrison Heckscher, "English Furniture Pattern Books in Eighteenth-Century America," American Furniture (Milwaukee: The Chipstone Foundation),1994, 195-196.
Christine Meadows, "The Furniture," The Magazine Antiques 135/2 (February 1989): 480-482.
Wallace B. Gusler, Furniture of Williamsburg and Eastern Virginia: 1710-1790 (Richmond: Virginia Museum, 1979), 125-126.
Wallace B. Gusler and Sumpter Priddy III, "Furniture of Williamsburg and eastern Virginia," The Magazine Antiques (August 1978): 289, 291.