Wall bracket
This wall bracket may have been among the “Brackets glasses etc” purchased by George Washington from the Philadelphia carver and gilder James Reynolds on March 16, 1791. Mounted below a looking glass, it supported a lamp that would have illuminated the green drawing room of the presidential mansion during the Friday “drawing rooms” hosted by Mrs. Washington and other evening entertainments. At the conclusion of his term, Washington took this bracket and its mate to Mount Vernon, where they were hung in the New Room. Martha Washington bequeathed them to her grandson, George Washington Parke Custis, who used them at Arlington House.
See also W-1181/A-B and W-2540/A-B.
The shelf is screwed to the top of the T-form supports.
Published ReferencesLuke Beckerdite, “Philadelphia Carving Shops, Part 1: James Reynolds,” The Magazine Antiques 125/5 (May 1984): 1130, 1132.
Helen Maggs Fede, Washington Furniture at Mount Vernon (Mount Vernon, Virginia: Mount Vernon Ladies Association, 1966), 46-48.
“Mount Vernon Centennial,” The Magazine Antiques 64/7 (July 1953): 30.
Marian S. Carson, “Washington Furniture at Mount Vernon,” American Collector 16/4 (May 1947): 7, 17.
Benson J. Lossing, Mount Vernon and its Associations: Historical, Biographical, Pictorial (New York: W.A. Townsend & Co., 1859), 300-301.
There are no works to discover for this record.