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Chats on Cottage and Farmhouse Furniture

Chapter 4: CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY NOTE
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The work surveys vernacular English cottage and farmhouse furniture from the late sixteenth century through the nineteenth, contrasting local, hand-made pieces with contemporary high-style cabinetmaking. It examines characteristic forms such as oak chests, gate-tables, dressers, Windsor chairs and ladder-back seats, materials and construction methods including carving, turning and hand-forged nails, and regional types like Lancashire wardrobes. The author discusses difficulties of precise dating, the persistence of traditional designs across generations, collecting guidance, and the decline of village cabinet-making under industrial manufacture; numerous illustrations and a chapter on old English chintzes accompany the text.

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Title: Chats on Cottage and Farmhouse Furniture

Author: Arthur Hayden

Contributor: Hugh Phillips

Release date: January 6, 2014 [eBook #44603]
Most recently updated: October 23, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Chris Curnow, Mary Akers and the Online
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Transcriber's note:
Spelling and punctuation inconsistencies have been harmonized. The original hyphenation and use of accented words has been retained. Obvious printer errors have been repaired. Please see the end of this book for further notes.


COMPANION VOLUME BY THE SAME AUTHOR

CHATS ON OLD FURNITURE

Illustrated by 72 Full-page Plates.

CONTENTS

CHAPTER
I. The Renaissance on the Continent
II. The English Renaissance
III. Stuart or Jacobean (Early Seventeenth Century)
IV. Stuart or Jacobean (Late Seventeenth Century)
V. Queen Anne and Early Georgian Styles
VI. French Furniture: the Period of Louis XV.
VII. French Furniture: the Period of Louis XVI.
VIII. French Furniture: the Period of Louis XVI.
IX. French Furniture: the First Empire Style
X. Chippendale and his Style
XI. Adam, Hepplewhite, and Sheraton Styles
XII. Hints to Collectors

CHATS ON
COTTAGE AND
FARMHOUSE FURNITURE

BOOKS FOR COLLECTORS

With Coloured Frontispieces and many Illustrations.
Large Crown 8vo, cloth.

CHATS ON ENGLISH CHINA.
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON OLD FURNITURE.
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON OLD PRINTS.
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON COSTUME.
By G. Woolliscroft Rhead.

CHATS ON OLD LACE AND
NEEDLEWORK.
By E. L. Lowes.

CHATS ON ORIENTAL CHINA.
By J. F. Blacker.

CHATS ON MINIATURES.
By J. J. Foster.

CHATS ON ENGLISH EARTHENWARE.
By Arthur Hayden.
(Companion Volume to "Chats on English China.")

CHATS ON AUTOGRAPHS.
By A. M. Broadley.

CHATS ON OLD PEWTER.
By H. J. L. J. Massé, M.A.

CHATS ON POSTAGE STAMPS.
By Fred J. Melville.

CHATS ON OLD JEWELLERY AND
TRINKETS.
By MacIver Percival.

CHATS ON COTTAGE AND FARMHOUSE
FURNITURE.
By Arthur Hayden.
(Companion Volume to "Chats on Old Furniture.")

LONDON: T. FISHER UNWIN.
NEW YORK: F. A. STOKES COMPANY.


SIDEBOARD OF CARVED OAK. ENGLISH, SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.
(In the Victoria and Albert Museum.)

Frontispiece.


Chats on Cottage
AND
Farmhouse Furniture

BY

ARTHUR HAYDEN
AUTHOR OF "CHATS ON OLD FURNITURE," ETC.

WITH A CHAPTER ON
OLD ENGLISH CHINTZES
By HUGH PHILLIPS

AND SEVENTY-THREE FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS

NEW YORK
FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
PUBLISHERS


(All rights reserved.)

TO
MY OLD FRIEND
FREDERIC ARUP
I DEDICATE THIS VOLUME
IN MEMORY OF A HAPPY LABOUR
OF LOVE COMPLETED


PREFACE

The number of works dealing with old English furniture has grown rapidly during the last ten years. Not only has the subject been broadly treated from the historic or from the collector's point of view, but latterly everything has been scientifically reduced into departments of knowledge, and individual periods have received detailed treatment at the hands of specialists.

Museums and well-known collections, noblemen's seats and country houses have furnished photographs of the finest examples, and these, now well-known, pieces have appeared again and again as illustrations to volumes by various hands.

It is obviously essential in the study of the history and evolution of furniture-making in this country that superlative specimens be selected as ideal types for the student of design or for the collector, but such pieces must always be beyond the means of the average collector.

The present volume has been written for that large class of collectors, who, while appreciating the beauty and the subtlety of great masterpieces of English furniture, have not long enough purses to pay the prices such examples bring after fierce competition in the auction-room.

The field of minor work affords peculiar pleasure and demands especial study. The character of the cottage and farmhouse furniture is as sturdy and independent as that of the persons for whom it was made. For three centuries unknown cabinet-makers in towns and in villages produced work unaffected by any foreign influences. Linen-chests, bacon-cupboards, Bible-boxes, gate tables, and other tables, dressers, and chairs possess particular styles of treatment in different districts. The eighteenth-century cabinet-makers scattered up and down the three kingdoms and in America found in Chippendale's "Director" a design-book which stimulated them to produce furniture of compelling interest to the collector.

The examples of such work illustrated in this volume have been taken from a wide area and are such as may come under the hand of the diligent collector in various parts of the country.

In view of the increased love of collecting homely furniture suitable for modern use, it is my hope that this book may find a ready welcome, especially nowadays, when so many of the picturesque architectural details of old homesteads are being reproduced in the garden suburbs of great cities.

It is possible that the authorities of local museums may find in this class of furniture a field for special research, as undoubtedly specimens of local work should be secured for permanent exhibition before they are dispersed far and wide and their identity with particular districts lost for ever.

In regard to the scientific study of farmhouse and cottage furniture, the ideal arrangement is that followed at Skansen, Stockholm, and at Lyngby, near Copenhagen. In the former a series of buildings have been erected in the open air, in connection with the Northern Museum, gathered from every part of Sweden, retaining their exterior character and fitted with the furniture of their former occupants. It was the desire of the founder, Dr. Hazelius, to present an epitome of the national life. Similarly at Lyngby, an adjunct of the Dansk Folkemuseum at Copenhagen, the life-work of Hr. Olsen has been given to gathering together and re-erecting a large number of old cottages and farmhouses from various districts in Denmark, from Iceland, the Faroe Islands, and from Norway and Sweden. These have their obsolete agricultural implements, and old methods of fencing and quaint styles of storage. The furniture stands in these specimen homes exactly as if they were occupied. It is a remarkable open-air museum, and the idea is worthy of serious consideration in this country. Old cottages and farmhouses are fast disappearing, and the preservation of these beauties of village and country life should appeal to all lovers of national monuments.[1]

In connexion with farmhouse furniture, old chintzes is a subject never before written upon. A chapter in this volume is contributed by Mr. Hugh Phillips, whose special studies concerning this little known field enable him to present much valuable information which has never before been in print, together with illustrations of chintzes actually taken from authentic examples of old furniture.

A brief survey is made of miscellaneous articles associated with cottage and farmhouse furniture. Some specimens of Sussex firebacks are illustrated, together with fenders, firedogs, pot-hooks, candle-holders, and brass and copper candlesticks.

The illustrations have been selected in order to convey a broad outline of the subject. My especial thanks are due to Messrs. Phillips, of the Manor House, Hitchin, for placing at my disposal the practical experience of many years' collecting in various parts of the country, and by enriching the volume with illustrations of many fine examples of great importance and rarity never before photographed.

To Messrs. A. B. Daniell & Sons I am indebted for photographs of specimens in their galleries.

In presenting this volume it is my intention that it should be a companion volume to my "Chats on Old Furniture," which records the history and

evolution of the finer styles of English furniture, showing the various foreign influences on English craftsmen who made furniture for the wealthy classes.

ARTHUR HAYDEN.

CONTENTS

CHAPTER I
    PAGE
INTRODUCTORY NOTE 25
   The minor collector—The originality of the village cabinet-maker—His freedom from foreign influences—The traditional character of his work—Difficult to establish dates to cottage and farmhouse furniture—Oak the chief wood employed—Beech, elm, and ash used in lieu of mahogany and satinwood—Village craftsmanship not debased by early-Victorian art—Its obliteration in the age of factory-made furniture—The conservation of old farmhouses with their furniture in Sweden and in Denmark—The need for the preservation and exhibition of old cottages and farmhouses in Great Britain.  
 
CHAPTER II
SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY STYLES 43
   Typical Jacobean furniture—Solidity of English joiners' work—Oak general in its use—The oak forests of England—Sturdy independence of country furniture—Chests of drawers—The slow assimilation of foreign styles—The changing habits of the people.  
 
CHAPTER III
THE GATE-LEG TABLE 83
   Its early form—Transitional and experimental stages—Its establishment as a permanent popular type—The gate-leg table in the Jacobean period—Walnut and mahogany varieties—Its utility and beauty contribute to its long survival—Its adoption in modern days.  
 
CHAPTER IV
THE FARMHOUSE DRESSER 113
   The days of the late Stuarts—Its early table form with drawers—The decorated type with shelves—William and Mary style with double cupboards—The Queen Anne cabriole leg—Mid-eighteenth-century types.  
 
CHAPTER V
THE BIBLE-BOX, THE CRADLE, THE SPINNING-WHEEL,
AND THE BACON-CUPBOARD
137
   The Puritan days of the seventeenth century—The Protestant Bible in every home—The variety of carving found in Bible-boxes—The Jacobean cradle and its forms—The spinning-wheel—The bacon-cupboard.  
 
CHAPTER VI
EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY STYLES 155
   The advent of the cabriole leg—The so-called Queen Anne style—The survival of oak in the provinces—The influence of walnut on cabinet-making—The early-Georgian types—Chippendale and his contemporaries.  
 
CHAPTER VII
THE EVOLUTION OF THE CHAIR 189
   Early days—The typical Jacobean oak chair—The evolution of the stretcher—The chair-back and its development—Transition between Jacobean and William and Mary forms—Farmhouse styles contemporary with the cane-back chair—The Queen Anne splat—Country Chippendale, Hepplewhite, and Sheraton—The grandfather chair—Ladder-back types—The spindle-back chair—Corner chairs.  
 
CHAPTER VIII
THE WINDSOR CHAIR 243
   Early types—The stick legs without stretcher—The tavern chair—Eighteenth-century pleasure gardens—The rail-back variety—Chippendale style Windsor chairs—The survival of the Windsor chair.  
 
CHAPTER IX
LOCAL TYPES 265
   Welsh carving—Scottish types—Lancashire dressers, wardrobes, and chairs—Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire, Cambridge, and Essex tables—Isle of Man tables.  
 
CHAPTER X
MISCELLANEOUS IRONWORK, ETC. 285
   The rushlight-holder—The dipper—The chimney crane—The Scottish crusie—Firedogs—The warming-pan—Sussex firebacks—Grandfather clocks.  
 
CHAPTER XI
OLD ENGLISH CHINTZES. (By Hugh Phillips) 315
   The charm of old English chintz—Huguenot cloth-printers settle in England—Jacob Stampe at the sign of the Calico Printer—The Queen Anne period—The Chippendale period—The age of machinery.  
 
INDEX 343

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

   SIDEBOARD OF CARVED OAK (ENGLISH,
SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY)
Frontispiece
 
CHAPTER I—Introductory Note PAGE
  CHESTS (SIXTEENTH CENTURY) 29
  ELIZABETHAN CHAIR 35
  CHEST (SEVENTEENTH CENTURY) 35
  INTERIOR OF FARMHOUSE PARLOUR 39
  INTERIOR OF COTTAGE 39
 
CHAPTER II  
  MONK'S BENCH 53
  OAK CHEST WITH DRAWERS UNDERNEATH 53
  JOINT STOOLS 57
  OAK TABLE 57
  CHEST (RESTORATION PERIOD) 63
  EARLY OAK TABLE (MIDDLE SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY) 63
  SMALL OAK TABLE (c. 1680) 65
  JACOBEAN CHEST OF DRAWERS (c. 1660) 65
  CHESTS OF DRAWERS 69
  CHEST OF DRAWERS (CABRIOLE FEET) 73
  WILLIAM AND MARY TABLE (c. 1670) 73
  CHILDREN'S STOOLS 77
  RARE BEDSTEAD (c. 1700) 77
 
CHAPTER III  
  TRIANGULAR GATE TABLE 87
  OAK SIDE-TABLE 87
  SMALL GATE TABLE (VERY EARLY TYPE) 91
  GATE TABLE (MIDDLE SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY) 91
  RARE TABLE WITH DOUBLE GATES 93
  RARE TABLE WITH DOUBLE GATES AND ONLY ONE FLAP 93
  GATE-LEG TABLE (RESTORATION PERIOD) 97
  GATE-LEG TABLE (YORKSHIRE TYPE) 97
  GATE-LEG TABLE WITH SIX LEGS ("BARLEY-SUGAR"
TURNING)
99
  GATE-LEG TABLE (BALL TURNING) 99
  COLLAPSIBLE TABLE WITH RARE X STRETCHER 101
  PRIMITIVE GATE-LEG TABLE 101
  WILLIAM AND MARY GATE-LEG TABLE 105
  SQUARE-TOP GATE-LEG TABLES 105
  MAHOGANY GATE-LEG TABLES 109
 
CHAPTER IV  
  OAK DRESSER (ABOUT 1680) 117
  OAK DRESSER (PERIOD OF JAMES II.) 117
  OAK DRESSER (EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURY) 119
  OAK DRESSER, URN-SHAPED LEGS (RESTORATION PERIOD) 119
  MIDDLE-JACOBEAN DRESSER 123
  WILLIAM AND MARY OAK DRESSER 127
  OAK DRESSER. SQUARE-LEG TYPE 127
  UNIQUE DRESSER AND CLOCK COMBINED 131
  OAK DRESSER. QUEEN ANNE CABRIOLE LEGS 135
  LANCASHIRE OAK DRESSER 135
 
CHAPTER V  
  BIBLE-BOXES. EARLY EXAMPLES 143
  BIBLE-BOXES (MIDDLE SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY AND
ORDINARY TYPE)
145
  OAK CRADLES 149
  YARN-WINDER AND SPINNING-WHEEL 151
  BUCKINGHAMSHIRE BOBBINS 151
 
CHAPTER VI  
  LANCASHIRE OAK SETTLES 159
  CUPBOARD WITH DRAWERS 163
  QUEEN ANNE BUREAU BOOKCASE 163
  OAK TABLES (EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURY) 165
  QUEEN ANNE GLASS- OR CHINA-CUPBOARD 171
  GEORGIAN CORNER-CUPBOARD 171
  OAK TABLES 173
  OAK TABLES, WITH TYPICAL COUNTRY CABRIOLE LEGS 177
  QUEEN ANNE TEA-TABLE 181
  OAK REVOLVING BOOK-STAND 181
  COUNTRY CHIPPENDALE TABLE 181
  SQUARE MAHOGANY FLAP-TABLE 183
  TRIPOD TABLE (c. 1760) 183
  COUNTRY CHIPPENDALE AND COUNTRY ADAM TABLES 187
 
CHAPTER VII  
  OAK ARM-CHAIRS (ONE DATED 1650) 191
  CHESTNUT ARM-CHAIR AND OAK ARM-CHAIR (c. 1690) 191
  YORKSHIRE CHAIR (RESTORATION PERIOD) 197
  CROMWELLIAN CHAIRS 197
  OAK SETTLE (c. 1675) 201
  OAK ARM-CHAIRS (ONE DATED 1777) 201
  OAK CHAIRS (c. 1680) IN WALNUT STYLES 205
  OAK CHAIRS, SHOWING VARIOUS TRANSITIONAL STAGES 209
  CHAIRS IN QUEEN ANNE STYLE 213
  COUNTRY CHIPPENDALE AND HEPPLEWHITE CHAIRS 215
  OAK SETTEES IN CHIPPENDALE STYLE 219
  COUNTRY CHAIRS IN CHIPPENDALE AND SHERATON
STYLES
225
  GRANDFATHER CHAIR 231
  ARM-CHAIR AND BACON-CUPBOARD 231
  SPINDLE-BACK AND LADDER-BACK CHAIRS 235
  CORNER CHAIRS 237
 
CHAPTER VIII  
  CHAIRS OF EARLIEST FORM WITH STICK LEGS 247
  OLIVER GOLDSMITH'S CHAIR 251
  CHAIRS WITH FIDDLE-SPLAT AND CABRIOLE LEGS 255
  CHIPPENDALE AND HEPPLEWHITE WINDSOR CHAIRS 257
  SHERATON STYLE WINDSOR CHAIRS 261
 
CHAPTER IX  
  CHEST, DATED 1636 (WELSH) 269
  CUPBOARD, DATED 1710 (WELSH) 269
  ELM WARDROBE (WELSH). OAK DRESSER (LANCASHIRE) 273
  FLAP-TOP TABLE (HERTFORDSHIRE TYPE) 275
  SPINDLE-BACK CHAIRS (LANCASHIRE) 275
  OAK CHEST OF DRAWERS (YORKSHIRE TYPE) 279
  LANCASHIRE OAK SETTLE (c. 1660) 279
  THREE-LEGGED TABLE (ISLE OF MAN) 281
  CRICKET TABLES (HERTFORDSHIRE,
SOUTH BEDS, CAMBRIDGE, AND ESSEX)
281
 
CHAPTER X  
  RUSHLIGHT-HOLDERS, SCOTCH CRUSIE, CANDLE-DIPPER,
PIPE CLEANER, ETC.
289
  QUEEN ANNE POT-HANGER, WITH ORIGINAL GRATE 291
  KETTLE TRIVET 291
  COUNTRY FIREDOGS AND FIRE-GRATE (EIGHTEENTH
CENTURY)
297
  SUSSEX IRON FIREBACKS 301
  SUSSEX IRON FIREBACKS AND ORIGINAL WOOD PATTERN 303
  GRANDFATHER CLOCK AND WARMING-PANS 307
  BRASS DIAL OF THIRTY-HOUR CLOCK 309
 
CHAPTER XI—Old English Chintzes  
  OLD TRADE CARD SHOWING CALICO PRINTERS AT
WORK
319
  HUGUENOT PRINTED CHINTZ WITH PORTRAITS 319
  HAND-PRINTED CHINTZES. QUEEN ANNE PERIOD AND
CHINESE STYLE
323
  EXOTIC BIRD AND GOTHIC STYLES (EIGHTEENTH
CENTURY)
327
  HAND-PRINTED CHINTZ BY R. JONES (OLD FORD) 331
  HEPPLEWHITE PERIOD AND VICTORIAN PERIOD DESIGNS 335
  VICTORIAN CHINTZ (IN THE COLLECTION OF MRS.
COBDEN UNWIN)
339

CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY
NOTE

CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY NOTE

The minor collector—The originality of the village cabinet-maker—His freedom from foreign influences—The traditional character of his work—Difficulty to establish dates to cottage and farmhouse furniture—Oak the chief wood employed—Beech, elm, and ash used in lieu of mahogany and satinwood—Village craftsmanship not debased by early Victorian art—Its obliteration in the age of factory-made furniture—The conservation of old farmhouses with their furniture in Sweden and in Denmark—The need for the preservation and exhibition of old cottages and farmhouses in Great Britain.

In regard to launching another volume on the market dealing with old furniture, a word of explanation is desirable, for nowadays of making books there is no end, and much study is a weariness to the collector.

In the present volume attention has been especially given to that class of furniture known as Cottage or Farmhouse. There is no volume dealing with this phase of collecting. Prices for old furniture of the finest quality have gone up by leaps and bounds, and for those not possessed of ample means the collection of superlative styles is at an end. Singularly enough, the most native furniture and that most typically racy of the soil has not hitherto attracted the attention of wealthy collectors. The plutocrats who buy only the finest creations of Chippendale, who have immediate private information when an exquisitely designed Sheraton piece is found, who amass a mighty hoard of gilt Stuart furniture, or who boast of an unrivalled collection of Elizabethan oak, do not touch the minor furniture made during a period of three hundred years for the common people.

The finest classes of English furniture made by skilful craftsmen for wealthy patrons must always be beyond the range of the minor collector. Every year brings keener zest among those interested in furniture of a bygone day, and it is therefore increasingly difficult for persons of taste and judgment who cannot afford high prices to satisfy their longings. It is obvious that specimens of massive appearance finely carved in oak of the Tudor age, or of elegantly turned work in walnut of Jacobean days, must be readily recognised as valuable. Sumptuous furniture tells its own story. It is unlikely nowadays that such wonderful "finds," concerning which imaginative writers are always telling us, will occur again—except on paper. Popular enthusiasm has been awakened, and more often than not the possessor of some mediocre piece of furniture or china attaches a value to it which is absurd. The publication of prices realised at auction has whetted

the cupidity of would-be sellers who convert early nineteenth-century chairs by a nod of the head into "Queen Anne," and who aver with equal veracity that ordinary blue transfer printed ware has "been in the family a hundred years."