Easy chair
Because easy chairs were expensive to upholster, only wealthier eighteenth-century Chesapeake households owned them. Estate inventories reveal these softly padded chairs with wings to protect from drafts were often placed in bedchambers, where the infirm, elderly, or even expectant and nursing mothers might use them. This particular easy chair, distinguished as the only American-made example with four cabriole legs terminating in claw-and-ball feet, belonged to George Washington's mother, Mary Ball Washington (1708-1789). Although she never used it at Mount Vernon or held her son in it as an infant (as was believed when purchased in 1910), its acquisition illustrates the reverence the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association had for her and the type of relic that formed the basis of Mount Vernon's collection in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Conservation done in 2005 uncovered remnants of its original upholstery foundation and showcloth - a vibrant red and mustard yellow wool damask smartly accented by contrasting blue-green wool tapes.
Published ReferencesRobert A. Leath,,"Robert and William Walker and the 'Ne Plus Ultra': Scottish Design and Colonial Virginia Furniture, 1730-1775," in American Furniture 2006, edited by Luke Beckerdite (Milwaukee: Chipstone Foundation, 2006), 79-80, fig. 39.
Carol Borchert Cadou, The George Washington Collection: Fine and Decorative Arts at Mount Vernon (New York: Hudson Hills Press, 2006), 266-67, cat. no. 96.
Wallace B. Gusler, Furniture of Williamsburg and Eastern Virginia, 1710-1790 (Richmond: Virginia Museum, 1979), 31, fig. 21.
Marion Day Iverson, The American Chair, 1630-1890 (New York: Hastings House Publishers, c1957), 132, 134, fig. 105.