This casepeice is illustrated in the 1999 edition of American Furniture
(pps.179-181). (A scan of this illustration is included in the images below.) It is one of a school monumental casepieces with pitched
pediments once thought to be the work of Newport masters, but all of
which have well known Providence provenances suggesting that this work
was being done in the capital city by it’s best makers, perhaps John
Carlile.
Tristam Burgess
(often misspelled “Tristram Burgess”) was son-in-law of Welcome Arnold,
a prominent 18th century business partner of the Brown family of Rhode
Island. Burgess was appointed Chief Justice of the State of Rhode Island
in 1815, and represented Rhode Island in the United States Congress
from 1825-1835. For more information on Burgess, click here to read his extensive obituary in the New York Times. This desk was made for him around 1801.
This desk was
purchased out of Pook & Pook. We were informed by Ron Pook that this
secretary came from the estate of Paul Frantz, former Dean at Lehi
University, who bought this piece at the Philadelphia antique show about
30 years ago from J. Carey, a dealer in the Philadelphia area.
The provenance of the desk is as follows. (…a brass plaque inside the prospect door documents the first 100 years of provenance.
)
- ~ 1801 –
Made for RI Chief Justice Tristam Burgess (1770-1853) - After 1853 –
Chief Justice Charles S. Bradley (1819-1888) buys desk from Burgess heirs
. - After 1888 –
Charles L. Pendleton (1846-1904) buys desk from Bradley heirs - 1901 –
Pendleton sells to R. G. Hazard (of an old Providence Family) - 1950s –
Robert Trump
(dealer) of Rhode Island probably acquired this desk out of the Hazard
Estate, selling to J.Carey, perhaps 20 years later. Darby Ott, a Rhode
Island collector, was involved with Trump, and for a time, the desk
resided in the Rhode Island Historical Society, according to Trump. - ~1980 –
J. Carey sold to Paul Frantz, Dean at Lehi University - 2011 –
Frantz (estate) sold to Stanley Weiss
Height: 106 in.