SAPFM Museum Furniture Collection

High Chest of Drawers

Attributed to John Goddard (American, 1723–1785)

High Chest of Drawers, Attributed to John Goddard (American, 1723–1785), 1755–85, Mahogany with chestnut and white pine
Maker
Attributed to John Goddard (American, 1723–1785)
Date
1755–85
Medium
Mahogany with chestnut and white pine
Dimensions
219.4 × 101.6 × 54.6 cm (86 3/8 × 40 × 21 1/2 in.)
Form
Case Piece
Origin
Newport
Museum
Art Institute of Chicago
Accession
1989.158
Credit line
Helen Bowen Blair Fund
Along with Philadelphia and Boston, Newport, Rhode Island, was one of the three leading furniture-making centers in colonial America. Newport benefited from its location on coastal trade routes between England and the West Indies, and its merchants were among the wealthiest and most influential figures in the colonies. The finest Newport furniture came from the Goddard and Townsend shops, whose most notable pieces were completed before the Revolution. This high chest is attributed to John Goddard. Goddard's marriage to the daughter of Job Townsend joined the two families, beginning a virtual furniture-making dynasty that remained active into the following century.
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