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A. H. Davenport and Company

A. H. Davenport and Company was a late 19th-century, early 20th-century American furniture manufacturer, cabinetmaker, and interior decoration firm. Based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, it sold luxury items at its showrooms in Boston and New York City, and produced furniture and interiors for many notable buildings, including The White House. The word "davenport," meaning a boxy sofa or sleeper-sofa, comes from the company.

The State Dining Room in 1904. Davenport & Co. made the twin dining tables, 50 side chairs, 6 armchairs and 3 serving tables for the room. Many of the side chairs, now upholstered in ivory, are still in use.

History edit

The company was founded by Albert H. Davenport (1845-1905), who began as a bookkeeper at the Boston Furniture Company in 1866, and bought the business about 1880 following the death of its owner.[1] He changed the company's name, and expanded it, opening a showroom in New York City. It produced high-end and custom-made furniture, which it retailed alongside fabrics, wallpaper, hardware, decorative items, and quality goods from a variety of makers. One of Davenport's first big commissions was for 225 pieces of furniture and decorative items for the Iolani Palace in Honolulu, Hawaii.[2]

H. H. Richardson edit

 
Davenport & Co. executed the interiors for H. H. Richardson's Thomas Crane Public Library (1881), in Quincy, Massachusetts.

The company formed a close relationship with architect H. H. Richardson. Boston Furniture Company–Davenport & Co. likely executed the furniture for his Winn Memorial Library (1879) in Woburn, Massachusetts.[3][4][5] Davenport & Co. executed the furniture and interiors for his Thomas Crane Public Library (1881) in Quincy, Massachusetts; his Billings Library (1883) in Burlington, Vermont; and his Converse Memorial Library (1885) in Malden, Massachusetts.[6][7]

Richardson designed the New York Court of Appeals Room (1883–84), on the third floor of the New York State Capitol in Albany. Davenport & Co. executed its highly carved, Byzantine-Romanesque-style cabinetwork and furniture.[8] Lord Coleridge, Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, described it as "the finest courtroom in the world."[9] In 1916, Richardson's courtroom was disassembled and relocated to the New York Court of Appeals Building.[10]

In 1885, Davenport hired an architect from Richardson's office, Francis H. Bacon, to be his chief designer. Bacon soon was promoted to vice-president of Davenport & Co.

Richardson died in 1886. The dining room furniture for his John J. Glessner House (1885–87) in Chicago, Illinois, was designed by an associate, Charles Coolidge, and executed by Davenport & Co.[11] Coolidge also designed the desk in the study.[12] The custom-designed case for the Steinway grand piano was made by the company, and is attributed to Bacon.[13][14]

The Warder Mansion (1885–88) in Washington, D.C., was one of Richardson's final buildings. Davenport & Co. made the furniture, but it is unclear whether design is partially attributable to Richardson, or wholly attributable to Bacon.[15]

Other architects edit

Davenport & Co. did work on the James J. Hill House (1891) in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The architects, Peabody and Stearns, were fired before the building's completion and its interiors were completed by Irving & Casson.

The company produced furniture and interiors for architect Charles Brigham's 1895 annex to the Massachusetts State House in Boston.[16]

To the designs of architect Stanford White, the company executed cabinetwork and furnishings for the Villard Houses (1882–84) in New York City; Naumkeag (1885–86) in Stockbridge, MA; Algonquin Club of Boston (1886-1888) in Back Bay, Boston, Massachusetts; Harbor Hill (1899-1902) in Roslyn, New York;[17] and the Payne Whitney House (1902–06) in New York City.[18]

To execute his interior designs for the Frederick William Vanderbilt Mansion (1896–99), in Hyde Park, New York, architect Charles Follen McKim assembled the team of Herter Brothers (floors, walls and ceilings), Davenport & Co. (furniture), and Edward F. Caldwell & Co. (lighting fixtures). McKim would reunite the team a couple years later to renovate The White House.

McKim, Mead and White designed the interiors for the George Eastman House (1905) in Rochester, New York. Davenport & Co. executed the work, including a dining room similar to McKim's State Dining Room.[19]

The company did work on the Henry Clay Frick House (1912–14) in New York City, Thomas Hastings, architect. The Frick Papers include receipts for "furniture and interior woodwork, fabrics and wall coverings, decorative painting."[20]

The White House edit

 
President Theodore Roosevelt seated in a State Dining Room armchair, on the South Porch of the White House, 1903.

Davenport & Co. made a set of sofas and chairs for the Cross Hall during the second Grover Cleveland Administration.[21]

McKim, Mead and White renovated the public rooms of The White House during the Theodore Roosevelt Administration, removing the grand staircase and nearly doubling the size of the State Dining Room. McKim's goal was "to make changes so that the house would not have to be altered again."[22] Herter Brothers executed plasterwork, paneling and cabinetwork for several of the public rooms, helping to turn a stylistic hodge-podge of interiors into a unified Neo-Classical whole. Edward F. Caldwell & Co. made the lighting fixtures, and Leon Marcotte & Co. and Davenport & Co. made the furniture.

Davenport & Co. executed Stanford White's furniture designs for the State Dining Room. These consisted of two neo-Georgian-style dining tables, six William-and-Mary-style armchairs, fifty Queen-Anne-style side chairs, a long serving table supported by carved-eagle pedestals,[23] and two matching console tables.[24] The company executed McKim's Federal-style furniture designs for the Family Dining Room, which consisted of an oval table, armchairs and side chairs, a sideboard, server, mirror, and china cabinet.[25] For the Green Room, the company made a rolled-back sofa, a set of six matching armchairs, and two sets of cane-back side chairs, all painted white.[26] Davenport & Co. also provided furniture for four of the bedrooms, and a bookcase for the President's Study.[27]

First Lady Helen Herron Taft removed the Lincoln Bed from the President's Bedroom, replacing it with Colonial-Revival pieces made by Davenport & Co.[28]

Oval Office edit

 
Theodore Roosevelt desk in the Executive Office, 1904.

Davenport & Co. executed McKim's furniture designs for the Executive Office and Cabinet Room. The pieces included the Theodore Roosevelt desk, the Cabinet Room's table and chairs, dark-green leather sofas with oversized brass tacks, and matching leather armchairs and sidechairs.[29]

President William Howard Taft moved the desk, sofas and chairs into the first Oval Office, which was completed in 1909. The furniture remained there for more than twenty years and was used by five presidents, until a December 24, 1929, fire. President Herbert Hoover rebuilt the Taft Oval Office, but accepted the donation of a new desk from a Michigan trade association.[30]

The White House bought a set of diminutive, cane-back mahogany armchairs from Davenport & Co. in 1902. Nearly-identical chairs, but with leather backs, had been made by the company for the Massachusetts State House. President Hoover installed six of the cane-back chairs his rebuilt Oval Office in 1930.[31] President Franklin D. Roosevelt moved them into the modern Oval Office, completed 1934, where they have been used by every president since. The chairs are currently in use in the Oval Office, including a pair flanking the Resolute Desk.[32]

The Theodore Roosevelt desk survived the 1929 fire, and was used in the modern Oval Office by Presidents Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower. Recently, the desk was used by Vice-president Richard Cheney in his ceremonial office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.

Personal edit

Albert Henry Davenport (December 5, 1845, Malden, Massachusetts – June 22, 1905, Squirrel Island, Maine) married Ella Louise Stetson (1851-1925), and they had two children: Fred Albert Davenport (1873-1928) and Alice May Davenport (1878-1944). Neither child married or had children.[33]

Davenport built a mansion for his family in Malden, Massachusetts, in 1892. His daughter occupied it until her death, and bequeathed it to a non-profit organization to operate it as a residence for the elderly. The Davenport Memorial Home retains most of its original furniture and fixtures.[34]

Legacy edit

Davenport and his family vacationed on Squirrel Island, Maine. He donated the island's public library and its first 4,000 books.[35]

Following Albert H. Davenport's 1905 death, Francis H. Bacon attempted to buy Davenport & Co., but was unsuccessful. Bacon established his own furniture and interior design business in 1908.[36]

Irving & Casson merged with Davenport & Co. about 1914, and continued in business until 1974. A collection of the joint-company's designs is at The Winterthur Library.[37]

Interiors by A. H. Davenport and Company survive in most of the buildings named above. Furniture by A. H. Davenport and Company is in the collection of the White House, the Smithsonian Institution, Historic New England,[38] the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Art Institute of Chicago,[39] the Carnegie Museum of Art,[40] the Brooklyn Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City.[41]

References edit

  1. ^ Farnam, Upholstery, p. 231.
  2. ^ In Pursuit of Beauty, p. 418.
  3. ^ In Harmony with the Architecture: The Furniture of H. H. Richardson February 21, 2014, at the Wayback Machine from Woburn Public Library.
  4. ^ Armchair for the Woburn Public Library February 2, 2014, at the Wayback Machine from Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
  5. ^ Side chair for the Woburn Public Library from Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
  6. ^ Farnam, Antiques, p. 1055.
  7. ^ Armchair for the Malden Public Library from David Rumsey.
  8. ^ Mary Jean Madigan, Nineteenth Century Furniture: Innovation, Revival and Reform (Art & Antiques, 1982), p. 9.
  9. ^ Froessel, Charles (October 5, 1959). "The Restoration of the Historic Court of Appeals Hall" (PDF). Retrieved July 14, 2013.
  10. ^ Opalka, Anthony (1993). Diana Waite (ed.). Albany Architecture: A Guide to the City. Albany, NY: Mount Ida Press. pp. 73–74. ISBN 9780962536816. Retrieved July 14, 2013.
  11. ^ Glessner House dining room chairs from Glessner House Museum.
  12. ^ Charles Coolidge from Glessner House Museum.
  13. ^ Music in the Mansion, the Glessner's Piano from Glessner House Museum.
  14. ^ Francis Bacon from Glessner House Museum.
  15. ^ The Metropolitan Museum of Art attributes its Warder chair to Bacon: Warder dining chair from Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Brooklyn Museum attributes its Warder chair to Richardson: Warder side chair from Brooklyn Museum.
  16. ^ Armchair from Massachusetts Legislature.
  17. ^ Interior of the MacKay house from Vintage Designs.
  18. ^ Wayne Craven, Stanford White: Decorator in Opulence and Dealer in Antiquities (Columbia University Press, 2005).[1]
  19. ^ Quigley, Kathleen (1990-03-18). "Splendor Restored At Eastman House". The New York Times. Retrieved July 14, 2013.
  20. ^ Henry Clay Frick Papers, Series IV: Receipts, File 1.18 from The Frick Collection.
  21. ^ Monkman, p. 175.
  22. ^ Monkman, p. 186.
  23. ^ Serving table, State Dining Room from Star Bunny Studios.
  24. ^ The serving table and consoles were based on an Italian table in White's own collection. Monkman, p. 297.
  25. ^ Monkman, p. 196.
  26. ^ Monkman, pp. 123, 188.
  27. ^ Monkman, p. 188.
  28. ^ Monkman, p. 198.
  29. ^ William Allman, White House Curator, "Oval Office Tour, December 1, 2008," C-SPAN documentary.
  30. ^ William Seale, p. 918.
  31. ^ Allman, C-SPAN documentary.
  32. ^ Recreating the Oval Office from George W. Bush Presidential Center.
  33. ^ The Davenport Family 2013-09-06 at the Wayback Machine from The Davenport Memorial Home.
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-08-31. Retrieved 2013-07-15.
  35. ^ Squirrel Island Library Dedication, 1904 From Maine Memory Network.
  36. ^ In Pursuit of Beauty, p. 418.
  37. ^ Irving & Casson Collection from The Winterthur Library.
  38. ^ Armchair Archived 2013-07-14 at archive.today from Historic New England.
  39. ^ Armchair from Art Institute of Chicago.
  40. ^ H. H. Richardson desk from Carnegie Museum of Art.
  41. ^ Farnum, Antiques, p. 1048.

Sources edit

  • "A. H. Davenport and Company, 1880-1908," in In Pursuit of Beauty: Americans and the Aesthetic Movement (Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1986), p. 418.[2]
  • Keith Bakker, "H. H. Richardson’s Furnishings," in The Makers of Trinity Church in the City of Boston (University of Massachusetts Press, 2004), pp. 83–103.
  • Anne Farnum, "A. H. Davenport and Company, Boston Furniture Makers," in The Magazine Antiques, v. 109 (May, 1976), pp. 1048–55.
  • Anne Farnam, "H. H. Richardson and A. H. Davenport: Architecture and Furniture as Big Business in America’s Gilded Age," in Tools and Technologies: America’s Wooden Age, (Robert Hull Fleming Museum, University of Vermont, 1979), pp. 80–92.
  • Anne Farnam, "The A. H. Davenport Company of Boston." in Upholstery in America and Europe: from the Seventeenth Century to World War I (W. W. Norton & Company, 1987), pp. 231–38.[3]
  • Betty C. Monkman, The White House: Its Historic Furnishings and First Families (Abbeville Press, 2000). ISBN 0-7892-0624-2.
  • Richard H. Randall Jr., The Furniture of H. H. Richardson (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 1962).
  • William Seale, The President's House: A History (White House Historical Association, 1986).

External links edit

  • Irving & Cassom-A. H. Davenport Company records from Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
  • White House. An archive of drawings and blueprints from Davenport Co. from Christie's Auctions, December 3, 2007.

davenport, company, late, 19th, century, early, 20th, century, american, furniture, manufacturer, cabinetmaker, interior, decoration, firm, based, cambridge, massachusetts, sold, luxury, items, showrooms, boston, york, city, produced, furniture, interiors, man. A H Davenport and Company was a late 19th century early 20th century American furniture manufacturer cabinetmaker and interior decoration firm Based in Cambridge Massachusetts it sold luxury items at its showrooms in Boston and New York City and produced furniture and interiors for many notable buildings including The White House The word davenport meaning a boxy sofa or sleeper sofa comes from the company The State Dining Room in 1904 Davenport amp Co made the twin dining tables 50 side chairs 6 armchairs and 3 serving tables for the room Many of the side chairs now upholstered in ivory are still in use Contents 1 History 1 1 H H Richardson 1 2 Other architects 1 3 The White House 1 3 1 Oval Office 2 Personal 3 Legacy 4 References 5 Sources 6 External linksHistory editThe company was founded by Albert H Davenport 1845 1905 who began as a bookkeeper at the Boston Furniture Company in 1866 and bought the business about 1880 following the death of its owner 1 He changed the company s name and expanded it opening a showroom in New York City It produced high end and custom made furniture which it retailed alongside fabrics wallpaper hardware decorative items and quality goods from a variety of makers One of Davenport s first big commissions was for 225 pieces of furniture and decorative items for the Iolani Palace in Honolulu Hawaii 2 H H Richardson edit nbsp Davenport amp Co executed the interiors for H H Richardson s Thomas Crane Public Library 1881 in Quincy Massachusetts The company formed a close relationship with architect H H Richardson Boston Furniture Company Davenport amp Co likely executed the furniture for his Winn Memorial Library 1879 in Woburn Massachusetts 3 4 5 Davenport amp Co executed the furniture and interiors for his Thomas Crane Public Library 1881 in Quincy Massachusetts his Billings Library 1883 in Burlington Vermont and his Converse Memorial Library 1885 in Malden Massachusetts 6 7 Richardson designed the New York Court of Appeals Room 1883 84 on the third floor of the New York State Capitol in Albany Davenport amp Co executed its highly carved Byzantine Romanesque style cabinetwork and furniture 8 Lord Coleridge Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales described it as the finest courtroom in the world 9 In 1916 Richardson s courtroom was disassembled and relocated to the New York Court of Appeals Building 10 In 1885 Davenport hired an architect from Richardson s office Francis H Bacon to be his chief designer Bacon soon was promoted to vice president of Davenport amp Co Richardson died in 1886 The dining room furniture for his John J Glessner House 1885 87 in Chicago Illinois was designed by an associate Charles Coolidge and executed by Davenport amp Co 11 Coolidge also designed the desk in the study 12 The custom designed case for the Steinway grand piano was made by the company and is attributed to Bacon 13 14 The Warder Mansion 1885 88 in Washington D C was one of Richardson s final buildings Davenport amp Co made the furniture but it is unclear whether design is partially attributable to Richardson or wholly attributable to Bacon 15 Other architects edit Davenport amp Co did work on the James J Hill House 1891 in Minneapolis Minnesota The architects Peabody and Stearns were fired before the building s completion and its interiors were completed by Irving amp Casson The company produced furniture and interiors for architect Charles Brigham s 1895 annex to the Massachusetts State House in Boston 16 To the designs of architect Stanford White the company executed cabinetwork and furnishings for the Villard Houses 1882 84 in New York City Naumkeag 1885 86 in Stockbridge MA Algonquin Club of Boston 1886 1888 in Back Bay Boston Massachusetts Harbor Hill 1899 1902 in Roslyn New York 17 and the Payne Whitney House 1902 06 in New York City 18 To execute his interior designs for the Frederick William Vanderbilt Mansion 1896 99 in Hyde Park New York architect Charles Follen McKim assembled the team of Herter Brothers floors walls and ceilings Davenport amp Co furniture and Edward F Caldwell amp Co lighting fixtures McKim would reunite the team a couple years later to renovate The White House McKim Mead and White designed the interiors for the George Eastman House 1905 in Rochester New York Davenport amp Co executed the work including a dining room similar to McKim s State Dining Room 19 The company did work on the Henry Clay Frick House 1912 14 in New York City Thomas Hastings architect The Frick Papers include receipts for furniture and interior woodwork fabrics and wall coverings decorative painting 20 The White House edit nbsp President Theodore Roosevelt seated in a State Dining Room armchair on the South Porch of the White House 1903 Davenport amp Co made a set of sofas and chairs for the Cross Hall during the second Grover Cleveland Administration 21 McKim Mead and White renovated the public rooms of The White House during the Theodore Roosevelt Administration removing the grand staircase and nearly doubling the size of the State Dining Room McKim s goal was to make changes so that the house would not have to be altered again 22 Herter Brothers executed plasterwork paneling and cabinetwork for several of the public rooms helping to turn a stylistic hodge podge of interiors into a unified Neo Classical whole Edward F Caldwell amp Co made the lighting fixtures and Leon Marcotte amp Co and Davenport amp Co made the furniture Davenport amp Co executed Stanford White s furniture designs for the State Dining Room These consisted of two neo Georgian style dining tables six William and Mary style armchairs fifty Queen Anne style side chairs a long serving table supported by carved eagle pedestals 23 and two matching console tables 24 The company executed McKim s Federal style furniture designs for the Family Dining Room which consisted of an oval table armchairs and side chairs a sideboard server mirror and china cabinet 25 For the Green Room the company made a rolled back sofa a set of six matching armchairs and two sets of cane back side chairs all painted white 26 Davenport amp Co also provided furniture for four of the bedrooms and a bookcase for the President s Study 27 First Lady Helen Herron Taft removed the Lincoln Bed from the President s Bedroom replacing it with Colonial Revival pieces made by Davenport amp Co 28 Oval Office edit nbsp Theodore Roosevelt desk in the Executive Office 1904 Davenport amp Co executed McKim s furniture designs for the Executive Office and Cabinet Room The pieces included the Theodore Roosevelt desk the Cabinet Room s table and chairs dark green leather sofas with oversized brass tacks and matching leather armchairs and sidechairs 29 President William Howard Taft moved the desk sofas and chairs into the first Oval Office which was completed in 1909 The furniture remained there for more than twenty years and was used by five presidents until a December 24 1929 fire President Herbert Hoover rebuilt the Taft Oval Office but accepted the donation of a new desk from a Michigan trade association 30 The White House bought a set of diminutive cane back mahogany armchairs from Davenport amp Co in 1902 Nearly identical chairs but with leather backs had been made by the company for the Massachusetts State House President Hoover installed six of the cane back chairs his rebuilt Oval Office in 1930 31 President Franklin D Roosevelt moved them into the modern Oval Office completed 1934 where they have been used by every president since The chairs are currently in use in the Oval Office including a pair flanking the Resolute Desk 32 The Theodore Roosevelt desk survived the 1929 fire and was used in the modern Oval Office by Presidents Harry S Truman and Dwight D Eisenhower Recently the desk was used by Vice president Richard Cheney in his ceremonial office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building Personal editAlbert Henry Davenport December 5 1845 Malden Massachusetts June 22 1905 Squirrel Island Maine married Ella Louise Stetson 1851 1925 and they had two children Fred Albert Davenport 1873 1928 and Alice May Davenport 1878 1944 Neither child married or had children 33 Davenport built a mansion for his family in Malden Massachusetts in 1892 His daughter occupied it until her death and bequeathed it to a non profit organization to operate it as a residence for the elderly The Davenport Memorial Home retains most of its original furniture and fixtures 34 Legacy editDavenport and his family vacationed on Squirrel Island Maine He donated the island s public library and its first 4 000 books 35 Following Albert H Davenport s 1905 death Francis H Bacon attempted to buy Davenport amp Co but was unsuccessful Bacon established his own furniture and interior design business in 1908 36 Irving amp Casson merged with Davenport amp Co about 1914 and continued in business until 1974 A collection of the joint company s designs is at The Winterthur Library 37 Interiors by A H Davenport and Company survive in most of the buildings named above Furniture by A H Davenport and Company is in the collection of the White House the Smithsonian Institution Historic New England 38 the Museum of Fine Arts Boston the Art Institute of Chicago 39 the Carnegie Museum of Art 40 the Brooklyn Museum the Metropolitan Museum of Art and St Patrick s Cathedral in New York City 41 nbsp Interior of Winn Memorial Library 1879 Woburn Massachusetts nbsp Interior of Billings Library 1883 Burlington Vermont nbsp Throne Room of the Iolani Palace c 1887 nbsp New York Court of Appeals Room in 2009 nbsp Fireplace New York Court of Appeals Room before its 1916 relocation nbsp Pedestal desk c 1884 from New York Court of Appeals Room nbsp Converse Memorial Library 1885 Malden Massachusetts nbsp Warder Mansion dining room c 1890 Francis H Bacon designed the Colonial Revival furniture nbsp Three sofas c 1899 Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site Hyde Park New York nbsp Reading Room Massachusetts State House Annex c 1908 nbsp Interior of George Eastman House 1905 Rochester New York nbsp North wall of the State Dining Room c 1903 nbsp The Green Room in 1904 nbsp The Family Dining Room in 1907 nbsp Theodore Roosevelt desk in the Taft Oval Office 1909 nbsp Wallpaper sold by Davenport amp Co nbsp Davenport sofa nbsp The cane back armchairs in the Oval Office were made by Davenport amp Co in 1902 References edit Farnam Upholstery p 231 In Pursuit of Beauty p 418 In Harmony with the Architecture The Furniture of H H Richardson Archived February 21 2014 at the Wayback Machine from Woburn Public Library Armchair for the Woburn Public Library Archived February 2 2014 at the Wayback Machine from Museum of Fine Arts Boston Side chair for the Woburn Public Library from Museum of Fine Arts Boston Farnam Antiques p 1055 Armchair for the Malden Public Library from David Rumsey Mary Jean Madigan Nineteenth Century Furniture Innovation Revival and Reform Art amp Antiques 1982 p 9 Froessel Charles October 5 1959 The Restoration of the Historic Court of Appeals Hall PDF Retrieved July 14 2013 Opalka Anthony 1993 Diana Waite ed Albany Architecture A Guide to the City Albany NY Mount Ida Press pp 73 74 ISBN 9780962536816 Retrieved July 14 2013 Glessner House dining room chairs from Glessner House Museum Charles Coolidge from Glessner House Museum Music in the Mansion the Glessner s Piano from Glessner House Museum Francis Bacon from Glessner House Museum The Metropolitan Museum of Art attributes its Warder chair to Bacon Warder dining chair from Metropolitan Museum of Art The Brooklyn Museum attributes its Warder chair to Richardson Warder side chair from Brooklyn Museum Armchair from Massachusetts Legislature Interior of the MacKay house from Vintage Designs Wayne Craven Stanford White Decorator in Opulence and Dealer in Antiquities Columbia University Press 2005 1 Quigley Kathleen 1990 03 18 Splendor Restored At Eastman House The New York Times Retrieved July 14 2013 Henry Clay Frick Papers Series IV Receipts File 1 18 from The Frick Collection Monkman p 175 Monkman p 186 Serving table State Dining Room from Star Bunny Studios The serving table and consoles were based on an Italian table in White s own collection Monkman p 297 Monkman p 196 Monkman pp 123 188 Monkman p 188 Monkman p 198 William Allman White House Curator Oval Office Tour December 1 2008 C SPAN documentary William Seale p 918 Allman C SPAN documentary Recreating the Oval Office from George W Bush Presidential Center The Davenport Family Archived 2013 09 06 at the Wayback Machine from The Davenport Memorial Home The Davenport Memorial Home Archived from the original on 2013 08 31 Retrieved 2013 07 15 Squirrel Island Library Dedication 1904 From Maine Memory Network In Pursuit of Beauty p 418 Irving amp Casson Collection from The Winterthur Library Armchair Archived 2013 07 14 at archive today from Historic New England Armchair from Art Institute of Chicago H H Richardson desk from Carnegie Museum of Art Farnum Antiques p 1048 Sources edit A H Davenport and Company 1880 1908 in In Pursuit of Beauty Americans and the Aesthetic Movement Metropolitan Museum of Art 1986 p 418 2 Keith Bakker H H Richardson s Furnishings in The Makers of Trinity Church in the City of Boston University of Massachusetts Press 2004 pp 83 103 Anne Farnum A H Davenport and Company Boston Furniture Makers in The Magazine Antiques v 109 May 1976 pp 1048 55 Anne Farnam H H Richardson and A H Davenport Architecture and Furniture as Big Business in America s Gilded Age in Tools and Technologies America s Wooden Age Robert Hull Fleming Museum University of Vermont 1979 pp 80 92 Anne Farnam The A H Davenport Company of Boston in Upholstery in America and Europe from the Seventeenth Century to World War I W W Norton amp Company 1987 pp 231 38 3 Betty C Monkman The White House Its Historic Furnishings and First Families Abbeville Press 2000 ISBN 0 7892 0624 2 Richard H Randall Jr The Furniture of H H Richardson Museum of Fine Arts Boston 1962 William Seale The President s House A History White House Historical Association 1986 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to A H Davenport and Company Irving amp Cassom A H Davenport Company records from Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution White House An archive of drawings and blueprints from Davenport Co from Christie s Auctions December 3 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A H Davenport and Company amp oldid 1181351072, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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