Table, 1850-1860
Add to SetSummary
The United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Appearing, commonly known as the Shakers, is a religious sect begun in the late 1700s. Members banded together into small, mostly self-sufficient, communal enclaves scattered from Maine to Kentucky. Shaker craftsmen fashioned household furnishings with plain lines, little ornamentation, and painted or stained in a uniform color. Their craftsmanship expressed honesty, simplicity, and utility--in keeping with the guiding principles of the Shaker faith.
The United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Appearing, commonly known as the Shakers, is a religious sect begun in the late 1700s. Members banded together into small, mostly self-sufficient, communal enclaves scattered from Maine to Kentucky. Shaker craftsmen fashioned household furnishings with plain lines, little ornamentation, and painted or stained in a uniform color. Their craftsmanship expressed honesty, simplicity, and utility--in keeping with the guiding principles of the Shaker faith.
Artifact
Table (Support furniture)
Date Made
1850-1860
Creators
Place of Creation
United States, Massachusetts, Pittsfield
United States, New York, New Lebanon
Creator Notes
Possibly made by the Shaker community in Hancock, Massachusetts or New Lebanon, New York.
Keywords
United States, New York, Mount Lebanon
United States, Massachusetts, Pittsfield
Location
Not on exhibit to the public.
Object ID
71.131.8
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford.
Material
Pine (Wood)
Color
Brown
Dimensions
Height: 28.125 in
Width: 39.25 in
Length: 18.5 in