Side chair
During the time George Washington spent in Philadelphia before and after the Revolution and during the Presidency, he came to appreciate the quality, style, and affordable price of the furnishings produced by its artisans. Pierced "scroll'd splatt" chairs were among the most popular offerings of Philadelphia cabinetmakers in the late eighteenth century. Washington may have purchased chairs such as this one to serve as plain but fashionable seating throughout the less formal rooms at Mount Vernon.
Other terms for this design include: pretzel-back, ladder-back, loop-back, ribbon-back.
Trapezoidal slip-seat frame upholstered in green haircloth; a black synthetic spun-bonded textile covers the bottom of the slip-seat.
Published ReferencesAnne Castrodale Golovin, "Daniel Trotter: Eighteenth Century Philadelphia Cabinetmaker" Winterthur Portfolio 6 (1970): 171-173.
Helen Maggs Fede, Washington Furniture at Mount Vernon (Mount Vernon, Virginia: Mount Vernon Ladies Association, 1966), 28-30.
Charles Montgomery, American Furniture: The Federal Period (New York: The Viking Press, 1966), 81.
Helen Comstock, American Furniture: Seventeenth, Eighteenth, and Nineteenth Century Styles (New York: The Viking Press, 1962), fig. 281.
Marion Day Iverson, The American Chair: 1630-1890 (New York: Hastings House Publishers, 1957), 208 -209, 211.
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