"The Neatest Pieces of Any Description": Furniture of Piedmont North Carolina, 1780-1860

North Carolina’s Piedmont region is known around the world for the manufacture of fine furniture. However, long before the factories of Lexington, Thomasville, Hickory, and High Point came into existence, the Piedmont was home to a diverse group of cabinetmakers who crafted distinctive regional furniture.
By the middle of the eighteenth century, immigrants from Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia began pouring into the North Carolina Piedmont in search of inexpensive yet fertile land. By 1800 about 250,000 Scotch-Irish, English, and German settlers called the region home. Cabinetmakers immediately utilized the abundant walnut, cherry, pine and poplar trees to produce well-made, stylish furniture for their homes. In most cases, these craftsmen combined national trends with local idiosyncratic preferences to produce regional furniture with a distinctive style and appearance.
This exhibit is drawn from MESDA’s extensive collection of Piedmont North Carolina furniture made between 1780 and 1860.
This exhibition is on view November 13, 2010 through Fall 2011 in the G. Wilson Douglas, Jr. Gallery of the Frank L. Horton Museum Center. Admission to Douglas Gallery exhibitions at MESDA is free of charge.
Chest of Drawers and Miniature Chest of Drawers
Attributed to Amos Alexander (1769-1847)
Mecklenburg County
1790-1800
Gift of Charlotte and Philip Hanes in honor of Thomas A. Gray and his multiple contributions to MESDA and Old Salem (acc. 5594.1-2)
High Chest on Frame
|
Cellaret
|
|
Chest of Drawers1810 - 1820Mecklenburg County |
Secretary and Bookcase1790 - 1800Mecklenburg or Gaston County |
|
Chest of Drawers &Miniature Chest of DrawersPossibly by Amos Alexander1790 - 1800Mecklenburg County |
High Chest of Drawers1796Alamance County |
|
Corner CupboardJohn Swisegood1820 - 1830Davidson County |
CupboardJohn Swisegood1820-1830Davidson County |
|
Chest of Drawers
|
Blanket Chest1850 - 1860Wilkes County |



