Swann Galleries - Printed & Manuscript Americana - Sale 2344 - April 8, 2014 - page 26

43
(CABINETMAKING.) Richardson, C.
Broadside of the Holley Cabinet Ware
House, with related notebook of furniture designs.
Illustrated letterpress broadside,
14 x 11 inches; folds, moderate foxing, and edge wear. Notebook: 28, [31] leaves (some
blank on verso) of ink and pencil sketches and manuscript notes. 4to, original
1
/
2
calf,
moderate wear; dampstaining to endpapers only.
Brockport, NY: A. Edwards, 1835; and np, 1830-33
[2,000/3,000]
The broadside advertises Richardson’s cabinet-making business in rural Holley, NY, west of
Rochester. He advertises that he “will manufacture and keep constantly on hand, a general
assortment of mahogany and cherry cabinet furniture,” and adds “furniture made to order on
short notice.”
The accompanying notebook shows a provincial craftsman working in the newly fashionable Empire-
style designs of the 1830s, with his own variations. Among the more fully executed designs in this
notebook are a washstand, stool, dressing tables, and secretaries, each with detailed measurements.
Some are titled, such as “French Bureau,” “Grecian Card Table,” and “Portable Secratary.” Some
may have been sketched during a trip to York, Ontario (now Toronto), including “York Bureau No.
1 and 2.” The book also includes details of carving designs, such as foliage, scrolls, turning profiles,
and volutes. In the rear of the volume are several recipes for varnishes and stains, some intended to
imitate more expensive materials such as mahogany, curly maple, and marble. Many of these recipes
are credited to other cabinet-makers residing in Ontario and northern New England. The notebook
is not signed, but was kept between 1830 and 1833, and common provenance suggests it was
likely by the same C. Richardson who issued the 1835 broadside in Holley, NY.
Provenance: Inherited by the consignor from grandmother Gertrude (Cole) Simmons (1895-1985)
of an old Holley-area family; her grandmother was Ellen Maria (Richardson) Cowles (1838-
1873), who may have been the daughter of the cabinetmaker.
42
(BURR, AARON.)
The Trial of Col. Aaron Burr, on an Indictment for
Treason.
Volume I (of 3). 147, [1], 135 pages. 8vo, contemporary
1
/
2
calf, minor wear;
inscription trimmed from top margin of title page, lacking blank leaf after title page and
final colophon leaf, minor foxing and dampstaining; inked owner’s stamp on flyleaf.
Washington, 1807
[300/400]
A transcript of Burr’s trial, “taken in shorthand by T. Carpenter.” “The most exciting trial
held in this country during the first half of the nineteenth century”—Graff 506. Usually
found incomplete, as the other volumes were issued separately the following year; no complete
sets found at auction since 1942. Howes B1013; Sabin 9433; Tompkins, Burr 18.
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