Note to Users

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Note to Users NOTE TO USERS This reproduction is the best copy available. ® UMI Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. THE PARADOX OF GOOD INTENTIONS: JOHN NEEDLES, CABINETMAKER IN ANTEBELLUM BALTIMORE By Dana Ellen Byrd A thesis submitted to the Faculty of the University of Delaware in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Early American Culture Spring 2005 © 2005 Dana Ellen Byrd All Rights Reserved Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. UMI Number: 1426012 Copyright 2005 by Byrd, Dana Ellen All rights reserved. INFORMATION TO USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleed-through, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. ® UMI UMI Microform 1426012 Copyright 2005 by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights reserved. This microform edition is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest Information and Learning Company 300 North Zeeb Road P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. THE PARADOX OF GOOD INTENTIONS: JOHN NEEDLES, CABINETMAKER IN ANTEBELLUM BALTIMORE By Dana Ellen Byrd Approved: / Bernard L. Herman, Ph.l Professor in charge of thesis on behalf of the Advisory Committee Approved: J. Ritchie Garrison, Ph.D. Director of the Winterthur Program in Early American Culture Approved: Conrado MrGefhpd&aw Iy Ph.D. Interim Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Approved: Conrado M. GempesaV-fpTm.D. Vice-Provost for Academic and International Programs Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS My first encounter with the story of John Needles made an indelible impression. I was offered my first glimpse of the story of this deeply moral man, who crafted abolitionist schemes and elegant furniture with equal aplomb, in an exhibit, Looking for Liberty: An Overview of Maryland History. The co-creator of that exhibit, Jeannine Disviscour, Curator and Associate Director of Satellite Museums at the Maryland Historical Society, freely shared the museum’s collections and her enthusiasm for this project. Elisabeth Proffen, Special Collections Librarian of the H. Furlong Baldwin Library of the Maryland Historical Society was also a tremendous help. I am indebted to the scholars who so generously shared their institutional collections, including Elaine Rice Bachman at the Maryland State Archives, Chris Densmore at Friends Historical Library, Swarthmore College, Dr. Julian Hudson at the Prestwould Foundation, Dr. Emma Lapsansky at Magill Library, Haverford College, Martha Rowe at the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts, Catherine Thomas at the Baltimore Museum of Art, Laura Willoughby at the City of Petersburg Museums. A special note of thanks is due to the staff of the Winterthur Libraries, including Heather Clewell, Kathy Coyle, Cate Cooney, Burt Denker, Claudia Ballou, Laura Parrish and Jeanne Solensky. m Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. I owe a tremendous debt to Winterthur Museum and the Lois F. McNeil Fellowship and I am truly grateful for the opportunities I have had as a fellow in the Winterthur Program for Early American Culture. Faculty members, Gretchen Buggeln, Wendy Cooper, Ritchie Garrison and Brock Jobe tirelessly provided advice and assistance. My fellow fellows offered laughter, moral support and helpful suggestions. Sandy Manno and John Dennis reminded me at every turn that the journey is just as important as the finished product. One of the greatest pleasures of this thesis process was the opportunity to engage collectors in conversations about their furniture. Thank you for access to your fabulous collections. I would like to recognize the scholarly contributions made before me by fellow Maryland furniture lovers, Alexandra A. Kirtley and Gregory R. Weidman. I am eternally grateful to my advisor, Bemie Herman, who not only provided intellectual support and direction, but reassurance and encouragement over gallons of coffee throughout the thesis process. Thank you for challenging me. Finally, I would like to express my deepest appreciation to my family and friends; you remain my inspiration and source of sustenance. I cannot thank you enough. iv Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF FIGURES.............................................................................................vi ABSTRACT.........................................................................................................vii THE PARADOX OF GOOD INTENTIONS: JOHN NEEDLES, CABINETMAKER IN ANTEBELLUM BALTIMORE: Introduction .................................................................................................1 Paradox and Ambiguity 1 .......................................................................... 2 Roots of Radicalism (1787-1809) .............................................................5 The Cabinetmaking Shop (1810-1822).................................................. 12 Paradox and Ambiguity II .......................................................................27 Publicity: Commissions and Confrontation (1836-1848) ......................................................... 40 The Retirement Years(1850-1878)......................................................... 48 Conclusion ................................................................................................ 53 FIGURES............................................................................................................... 56 BIBLIOGRAPHY................................................................................................. 69 APPENDIX A: APPRENTICES BOUND TO JOHN NEEDLES (1812-1859)........................................................ 74 APPENDIX B: FURNITURE CATALOGUE OF SELECT NEEDLES FURNITURE.................................................77 v Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1: High Banks, Talbot County, Maryland. 1780 .................................................. 56 Figure 2: John and Mary Ann Needles (nee Bowers) ca.1855.........................................57 Figure 3: John Needles and Sons, ca. 1875 ...................................................................... 58 Figure 4: John Needles (center) and Family, ca. 187 ...................................................... 59 Figure 5: John Needles, “Earnest in the Cause,” ca. 1872 ..............................................60 Figure 6: Needles/Matthews Marriage Certificate, 1811 ...............................................60 Figure 7: Domestic Roving and Spinning Machine, nd .................................................. 61 Figure 8: Location of John Needles’s Hanover Street Manufactory .............................. 62 Figure 9: Advertisement for J. Needles & Son Dry Goods Retailers, ca. 1860 ............63 Figure 10: John Needles Furniture Label, ca. 1810-1815 ..............................................64 Figure 11: John Needles Furniture Label, ca. 1815-1825 ..............................................64 Figure 12: John Needles Furniture Label, ca. 1830-1845 ..............................................65 Figure 13: John Needles Furniture Ink Stamp, ca 1835-48 .............................................66 Figure 14: Baltimore from Federal Hill, 1831.................................................................67 Figure 15: “Colored Schools Broken up, in the Free States.” .........................................68 vi Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. ABSTRACT For nearly forty years, craftsman John Needles (1786-1878, fl. 1810-1848) operated a thriving cabinetmaking business in antebellum Baltimore, Maryland. His shop executed appealing, sophisticated furniture for customers from Philadelphia to New Orleans, in styles ranging from neo-classical to Rococo Revival. In spite of his success, Needles privileged his Quaker faith, family and anti-slavery work above his craft; he regarded his furniture as a means of providing for his family and a vehicle for disseminating the abolitionist message. Today his achievements beyond the cabinetmaking shop are largely forgotten. Driven by the larger question of the role of biography in the decorative arts, this essay combines object evidence with biographical details, and period accounts to present the most complete picture of the life of an extraordinary antebellum (crafts) man to date. vii Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Introduction Quaker, husband, father, abolitionist, and cabinetmaker, John Needles (1786- 1878, fl. 1810-1848) successfully
Recommended publications
  • Maryland Historical Magazine, 1976, Volume 71, Issue No. 3
    AKfLAND •AZIN Published Quarterly by the Maryland Historical Society FALL 1976 Vol. 71, No. 3 BOARD OF EDITORS JOSEPH L. ARNOLD, University of Maryland, Baltimore County JEAN BAKER, Goucher College GARY BROWNE, Wayne State University JOSEPH W. COX, Towson State College CURTIS CARROLL DAVIS, Baltimore RICHARD R. DUNCAN, Georgetown University RONALD HOFFMAN, University of Maryland, College Park H. H. WALKER LEWIS, Baltimore EDWARD C. PAPENFUSE, Hall of Records BENJAMIN QUARLES, Morgan State College JOHN B. BOLES, Editor, Towson State College NANCY G. BOLES, Assistant Editor RICHARD J. COX, Manuscripts MARY K. MEYER, Genealogy MARY KATHLEEN THOMSEN, Graphics FORMER EDITORS WILLIAM HAND BROWNE, 1906-1909 LOUIS H. DIELMAN, 1910-1937 JAMES W. FOSTER, 1938-1949, 1950-1951 HARRY AMMON, 1950 FRED SHELLEY, 1951-1955 FRANCIS C. HABER 1955-1958 RICHARD WALSH, 1958-1967 RICHARD R. DUNCAN, 1967-1974 P. WILLIAM FILBY, Director ROMAINE S. SOMERVILLE, Assistant Director The Maryland Historical Magazine is published quarterly by the Maryland Historical Society, 201 W. Monument Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21201. Contributions and correspondence relating to articles, book reviews, and any other editorial matters should be addressed to the Editor in care of the Society. All contributions should be submitted in duplicate, double-spaced, and consistent with the form out- lined in A Manual of Style (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1969). The Maryland Historical Society disclaims responsibility for statements made by contributors. Composed and printed at Waverly Press, Inc., Baltimore, Maryland 21202,. Second-class postage paid at Baltimore, Maryland. © 1976, Maryland Historical Society. 6 0F ^ ^^^f^i"^^lARYLA/ i ^ RECORDS LIBRARY \9T6 00^ 26 HIST NAPOLIS, M^tl^ND Fall 1976 #.
    [Show full text]
  • Researching the Underground Railroad in Delaware
    Researching the Underground Railroad in Delaware A Select Descriptive Bibliography of African American Fugitive Narratives by Peter T. Dalleo Sponsored by The Underground Railroad Coalition of Delaware & The City of Wilmington James M. Baker, Mayor Peter D. Besecker, Director, Department of Planning June 2008 City of Wilmington Louis L. Redding City/County Building 800 N. French Street Wilmington, Delaware 19801 www.WilmingtonDE.gov John W. Tillman served as a Private in Co. C, 127th Regiment, U.S. Colored Infantry. Image courtesy of Delaware Historical Society On the cover: Historic Map Digital Globe: From the Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) ArcGIS Explorer Resource Center. Authored using “The World on Mercator’s Projection” from the David Rumsey Historical Map Collection. The original map was published in 1812 and drawn by L. Hebert Neele under the direction of John Pinkerton. Acknowledgments Solomon Bayley, Freedom Seeker on the Delmarva Peninsula, 1799 I would like to thank the Underground Railroad Coalition for inspiring me to follow through on some of my research ideas and encouraging me to produce something tangible that others might use; the Camden Historical Society (CHS) for providing a forum at which to present my thoughts about research and sources about Delaware’s Underground Railroad, which led to the development of this booklet; and finally, the City of Wilmington’s Planning Department for its tremendous assistance, without which this booklet would not have been printed. Foremost among the specific individuals to whom I wish to express my gratitude are Debra Campagnari Martin for her dual role as coordinator of both this phase of the Underground Railroad Coalition’s undertakings and of the Wilmington’s Planning Department efforts to produce this booklet.
    [Show full text]
  • Maryland Historical Magazine, 1911, Volume 6, Issue No. 2
    /V\5A.SC 5^1- i^^ MARYLAND HISTORICAL MAGAZINE Voi,. VI. JUNE, 1911. No. 2. THE MARYLAND GUARD BATTALION, 1860-61.1 ISAAC F. NICHOLSON. (Bead before the Society April 10, 1911.) After an interval of fifty years, it is permitted the writer to avail of the pen to present to a new generation a modest record of a military organization of most brilliant promise— but whose career was brought to a sudden close after a life of but fifteen months. The years 1858 and 1859 were years of very grave import in the history of our city. Local political conditions had become almost unendurable, the oitizens were intensely incensed and outraged, and were one to ask for a reason for the formation of an additional military organization in those days, a simple reference to the prevailing conditions would be ample reply. For several years previous the City had been ruled by the American or Know Nothing Party who dominated it by violence through the medium of a partisan police and disorderly political clubs. No man of opposing politics, however respectable, ever undertook to cast his vote without danger to his life. 'The corporate name of this organization was "The Maryland Guard" of Baltimore City. Its motto, " Decus et Prsesidium." 117 118 MAEYLAND HISTORICAL MAGAZIlfE. The situation was intolerable, and the State at large having gone Democratic, some of our best citizens turned to the Legis- lature for relief and drafted and had passed an Election Law which provided for fair elections, and a Police Law, which took the control of that department from the City and placed it in the hands of the State.
    [Show full text]
  • Maryland Historical Magazine, 1985, Volume 80, Issue No. 4
    Maryland Historical Magazine o n' cm N 3 < 00 o 'Z p B en- % I—1 00 Published Quarterly by The Museum and Library of Maryland History The Maryland Historical Society Winter 1985 THE MARYLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY OFFICERS, 1985-1986 William C. Whitridge, Chairman* Robert G. Merrick, Sr., Honorary Chairman" Brian B. Topping, President* Mrs. Charles W. Cole, Jr., Vice President* E. Phillips Hathaway, Treasurer* Mrs. Frederick W. Lafferty, Vice President* Samuel Hopkins, Asst. Secretary/Treasurer* Walter D. Pinkard, Sr., Vice President* Bryson L. Cook, Counsel* Truman T. Semans, Vice President* Leonard C. Crewe, Jr., Past President* Frank H. Weller, Jr., Vice President* J. Fife Symington, Jr., Past Chairman of the Richard P. Moran, Secretary* Board* * The officers listed above constitute the Society's Executive Committee. BOARD OF TRUSTEES, 1985-1986 H. Furlong Baldwin H. Irvine Keyser II (Honorary) Mrs. Emory J. Barber, St Mary's Co. Richard R. Kline, Frederick Co. Gary Black Hon. Charles McC. Mathias, Jr. John E. Boulais, Caroline Co. Robert G. Merrick, Jr. J. Henry Butta Michael Middleton, Charles Co. Mrs. James Frederick Colwill (Honorary) Jack Moseley Donald L. DeVries Thomas S. Nichols (Honorary) Leslie B. Disharoon James L. Olfson, Anne Arundel Co. Jerome Geckle Mrs. David R. Owen C. William Gilchrist, Allegany Co. Mrs. Brice Phillips, Worcester Co. Hon. Louis L. Goldstein, Calvert Co. J. Hurst Purnell, Jr., Kent Co. Kingdon Gould, Jr., Howard Co. George M. Radcliffe William Grant, Garrett Co. Adrian P. Reed, Queen Anne's Co. Benjamin H. Griswold III G. Donald Riley, Carroll Co. Willard Hackerman Mrs. Timothy Rodgers R.
    [Show full text]
  • National Register Properties in Talbot County
    NATIONAL REGISTER PROPERTIES IN TALBOT COUNTY Property Name: All Saints' Church Date Listed: 5/27/1983 Inventory No.: T-83 Location: Wye Mills Easton Road (MD 662), Longwoods, Talbot County Description: All Saints¿ Church is a small rectangular frame church constructed in 1900-1901. It is clad in board-and-batten siding, and its nave is five bays long with a steeply-pitched gable roof and stickwork in the gables. The lower portion of each wall is sheathed in horizontal clapboard. On the south facade, a gabled entrance porch with stickwork detailing occupies the westernmost bay, and lancet windows define the remaining four bays. A three-stage bell tower with a shingled spire rises adjacent to the westernmost bay of the north facade. The first stage is sheathed in horizontal clapboard with one lancet window per side. The second stage is sheathed in board-and-batten siding and holds paired lancet windows on each side. The third stage, also board-and-batten, holds two large louvered Gothic-arched openings per side. The roof of the tower is pyramidal with flared eaves. A two bay wide apse projects from the east gable, and holds a tripartite stained-glass lancet window. A small gabled wing extends to the north of the apse. The west gable of the nave is pierced by two lancet windows below a small circular window. The interior retains its original woodwork, including decorative roof trusses and framing members, and vertical-board wainscoting. Significance: Designed by New York architect, Henry Martyn Congdon, All Saints Church was erected in 1900-1901 on the same site as its predecessor, also designed by Congdon, which burned on December 31, 1899.
    [Show full text]
  • William and Washington Tuck and Annapolis Cabinetmaking, 1795-1838
    ABSTRACT Title of Thesis: ‘HAVE HONESTLY AND FAIRLY LABOURED FOR MONEY’: WILLIAM AND WASHINGTON TUCK AND ANNAPOLIS CABINETMAKING, 1795-1838. Alexander J. Lourie, Master of Arts, 2004 Thesis directed by: Professor Nancy L. Struna Department of American Studies The careers of William and Washington Tuck coincided with a significant transition of Annapolis furniture-making, and changes in the political and economic hierarchies in the post-revolutionary market economy of Maryland. Both brothers learned their trade under the tutelage of John Shaw at a time when the center of Maryland’s cabinetmaking shifted to Baltimore. Politically, republican ideas of democracy and representation began to take hold, and slowly found a place in Annapolis, a town characterized by its adherence to an older system of patronage and backroom negotiations. The Tucks’ entrepreneurial talents and social, political, and artisanal connections facilitated their access to the State House, Annapolis’ most important source of commerce and employment. This study adds two new players to the scholarly understanding of Annapolis cabinetmaking, a story heretofore dominated by John Shaw, and shows how two artisans in Maryland’s capital pursued their trade and maintained their competency in early national Annapolis. ‘HAVE HONESTLY AND FAIRLY LABOURED FOR MONEY’: WILLIAM AND WASHINGTON TUCK AND ANNAPOLIS CABINETMAKING, 1795-1838 by Alexander J. Lourie Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Maryland, College Park in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts 2004 Advisory Committee: Professor Nancy L. Struna, Chair Professor Mark P. Leone Dr. Edward C. Papenfuse ©Copyright by Alexander J.
    [Show full text]
  • Port Street Small Area Plan Easton, Maryland Historic Image: Looking Northeast, After Construction of Parkway Table of Contents
    September 2017 Port Street Small Area Plan Easton, Maryland Historic Image: Looking Northeast, after Construction of Parkway Table of Contents 04 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 63 ENVIRONMENTAL 07 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 70 IMPLEMENTATION Annexation 08 INTRODUCTION Zoning Existing Conditions & Site Analysis Critical Area Regulations History of Easton Point & Port Street Growth Policies Outside of the Study Area Public Boat Ramp Dredging PROPOSED LAND USE PLAN 32 Promoting Apartment Units within the Study Area Promoting Pedestrian Connections within the Study Area DESCRIPTIONS OF SUB-AREAS 34 Promoting Urban Form within the Study Area At the Water’s Edge Streamlining the Process Density Bonuses Enhanced Gateways/Cultural and Innovation Centers Paying for Public Improvements Link to Downtown & “The Hill” 80 TEXT & IMAGE REFERENCES 45 DESIGN 83 APPENDICES 46 HISTORIC PRESERVATION 50 HOUSING 55 TRANSPORTATION 62 UTILITIES Port Street Small Area Plan 3 Acknowledgements The Port Street Small Area Plan was prepared in close collaboration Cathy Hill Carolyn Thornton between the Town of Easton and the Easton Economic Development Steve Houston Rebecca Thornton Corporation. This Plan is a testament to the creativity, talent and vision Lehr Jackson Paige Tilghman of the citizens of Easton, Maryland and the surrounding area. Anthony Kelly Bryce Turner Michael Levitt We would like to thank the Town of Easton community for their Rick VanEmburgh Jordan Lloyd support and participation in the creation of this Port Street Small Sharon VanEmburgh Margaret McLemore Area Plan. Over the course of two years, hundreds of citizens, elected Mary Kay Verdery Cliff Meredith officials, and government officials participated in small group meetings, Joe Weatherly Tim Miller visioning sessions, strategic sessions, walking tours, and boat tours.
    [Show full text]