Desk-on-frame

American

Not on view

An early inscription in Dutch inside the lid recording a business transaction points to a New York origin for this desk, which is reputed to have been found in Brooklyn in the early 1900s. The use of gumwood, a wood that found favor in New York City and environs for furniture and interior woodwork during the early decades of the eighteenth century, supports such an attribution. No comparable piece is known. The turnings appear to derive from French prototypes and the desk may have been made by a Huguenot craftsman—a distinct possibility in New York around 1700.

Desk-on-frame, Sweet gum, possibly mahogany veneer, yellow poplar, American

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