Friday, 27 September 2019

The Elusive Turnpin Chair - A Lincolnshire rush-seated chair by any other name would smell as sweet


William Sergeant  long ago remarked to me that no one could confidently identify a ‘pin’ chair, also known as a ‘turn-pin’ chair. These chairs and their makers are something of a late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century mystery. An idle search in the British Newspaper Archive during some Windsor chair research turned up Nicholas Allen of Boston, chair and spinning- wheel maker, who placed two advertisements for pin chair-makers in the Stamford Mercury on 6 August 1790 and 10 June 1803. Could the archive shed further light on pin or turn-pin chairs and their makers?  The resulting research was published in the Journal of the Regional Furniture Society.


The most important and illuminating advertisement read:


26 June 1812 Stamford Mercury: High-street, Boston. Matthew Bacon for William White deceased. To Chair-makers, Cabinet-makers, Wheelwrights, &c. To be SOLD by AUCTION By MATTHEW BACON, On Friday the 3d day of July 1812, on the premises of the late WILLIAM WHITE, Chair-maker, HIGH-STREET, BOSTON; ALL the STOCK in TRADE; consisting of upwards of 400 ash poles, 2,250 feet of ash, elm, and wainscot, 50 camp poles, 60 bed sides and ends, a quantity of pin chairs, a large quantity of stuff ready turned, a quantity of mats and rushes, 2 benches, blocks, turning-frame, tools &c. &c. N.B. The wood being all dry, is well worth the attention of the public. Credit will be given for all bargains above forty shillings, on approved security, to January the 20th, 1813.

That, together with the rest of my research, may be found here.


© Julian Parker 2019


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