Sunday, November 15, 2020

LaRue Literacy and The Stierle Family of Hodgenville

 by Gary Dean Gardner, Independent Scholar 


Born Nona Blandfield on 14th November 1887 near Leitchfield, Kentucky to Methodist parents Sarah Jane Hart and James Harvey Blandford, members of Summit United Methodist Church, Hodgenville’s Nona Stierle is best known perhaps as our county’s first librarian.  An outreach of the Ladies’ Lincoln League, our first LaRue County Public Library had its austere beginnings in the back room of Mrs. Stierle’s bakery in downtown Hodgenville.  Long a member and active supporter of the group, Mrs. Stierle and the League became challenged to improve this community service by a scathing article making fun of the women’s meager lending library behind the bakery counter.  The New York writer expouned upon the widespread ignorance of our local children and the need for true public library, humiliating the Ladies and the entire county.  The embarrassment brought by this negative national attention spearheaded the move to raise money and establish a proper library. 

No longer the part-time librarian, Nona Stierle nonetheless was a fervent supporter of the cause, and worked diligently to see the dream of a respectable library come to fruition.  Their accomplishment was heralded in the local paper, “Hodgenville. Ky., Feb. 12. 1935 — A long- fostered project of the Ladies' Lincoln League was due to materialize here tonight with the dedication of the new $11,500 Lincoln Memorial Library. A program, in which leading citizens of Larue County planned to take part, was arranged under the direction of Mrs. D. B. Munford. president of the league. Entertainment on the program includes singing by a double quartet consisting of Mesdames C. B. Funk. LaRue, Clara Walther, Nona Stierle. Dr. Shacklette. Ollie Lyons, J. R. Wil-son and Edward Elliott, and a solo whistling number by Mrs. Hugh Fulkerson.”

 Prior to coming to Hodgenville, Nona Blandford had married George H. Stierle (3 JAN 1879- 7 JUNE 1921) in Grayson County. George was a baker by profession and had established a shop in Leitchfield where the family resided in 1910.  For reasons unknown, but perhaps due in part to the early death of their young son, the couple, along with their daughter Sarah and Nona’s mother came to Hodgenville in 1912 to operate a bakery here.  The couple had 6 children, they being Anna Mae (1912-1993), George Jr. (1910-1911), Helen (1914-1987), Martha (1917-1966), Winona (1919-2002), & Sarah (1908-1974), all of whom, but for baby George, were reared in the Methodist Church family at Hodgenville.  

Of all the children, the best remembered and loved was surely “Miss Sarah”, their eldest child.  Never married, “Miss Sarah” was the surrogate mother to hundreds of LaRue County children during her memorable career as an elementary school teacher.  She clothed & fed countless needy children out of her own pocket in a time long before any community outreach programs were fathomed. She and her entire family rests in Red Hill Cemetery.


Hodgenville Elementary Principal Edwin Harvey with "Miss Sarah" Stierle


George Stierle’s life was cut short prematurely, but as mentioned his widow Nona continued to run his bakery which she expanded to incorporate our fledgling County Library.  George, the son of Rudolph Theodore Stierle Sr. and Marie Magdalena, was in reality named Heinrich George, having been born in Baden-Württemberg, Germany and emigrating from there with his parents, four brothers & two sisters on the S. S. Trave, arriving in New York at 26 April 1889. The family made its way to Louisville by 1910, where Theodore worked as a cabinetmaker making church furniture.  It might be surmised that George was trained in Germany as a baker.  Surely Lutheran by birth, it seems rationale that he would make the conversion to Methodism. He was a proud member of B. R. Young Lodge #132 of Hodgenville.

George & Nona's graves at Hodgenville's Red Hill Cemetery


Saturday, August 22, 2020

Southern Food Furniture; The Sugar Chest


An Exploration of the Culture & Myth 
Behind the South's Most Celebrated Antique

by Gary Dean Gardner, Independent Scholar


Kentucky Sugar Chest from Bob & Norma Noe Collection, Speed Museum Louisville KY

From the earliest Colonial period, Southern social activity has been linked to the preparation and sharing of food, with the climax of any important Southern occasion being based upon the enjoyment of good food and good company.  Having such an emphasis on food in our lives, it comes as little surprise that our ancestors crafted special furniture just for the presentation and/or preservation of food.
 
Few forms in American furniture are truly unique.  Even the Democratic stability of the young United States as was manifested in wood during the Federal period is based heavily upon the classicism in French styles of the late 18th century.  The French in turn had borrowed from the Greeks and Romans long before.  Americans of the early 19th century as a whole seemed to be struggling so in creating an identity that there was little originality in furniture function and form.  In the American South, however, we find a long established agrarian culture with multi-generational webs of common ancestry that, while far from homogeneous, encouraged a comparable social structure within the majority of the 13 states which formed the region.  This cultural basis bound these states together, allowing an early individualized sense of expression to develop in the decorative arts which directly influenced unique furniture adaptations.  Function, not fashion alone, began to demand form, and as the planter culture started to set itself apart from its northern neighbors, a distinct separation can be noted in furniture production north to south. 

Sugar Cones or Loafs came in varying sizes & required nippers or a sugar hatchet to cut for use.
 
Dismissing fictionalized “Gone with the Wind” accounts of plantation life, we know that the planter class worked hard to tame their acres and cultivate their rich, overgrown lands as pioneers transformed themselves into landed gentry, modeling their American identities on the English system of class they initially wished to replicate.  These early generations had little time for pretension (I), yet they demanded festive interaction and revelry with their peers, in social opposition to the Puritans of New England.  Their homes were large, to accommodate big families both black and white, but just as the “plantation” houses were designed to be used, so their furnishings had to meet the same demands.  With the exception of the coastal cities, imported and custom-made furniture (from England or the northeast) was a luxury during the colonial period and early 19th century prior to the establishment of large scale furniture factories in Philadelphia and later Cincinnati, which shipped heavily downriver with improvements in the steamboat and navigation of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. While beauty may have been desired by Southerners to imitate that of nature so abundant all around them, use was of most importance to the colonial Southern planter.  In this light we can better understand the unique regional furniture forms that developed, inclusive of the slab or hunt board and biscuit rock, incorporating both utility and design.  Cabinetry had to be strong for endurance, meeting the multiple needs of the plantation family, and yet reflecting some sense of the owner’s position and expanding wealth.  
 
Sugar Comes to Dixie 

"Cutting the Sugar-Cane" Ladies' Society for Promoting the Early Education of Negro Children, London, ca. 1833-37


The uniquely “Southern” furniture forms that emerged certainly met these criteria.  Examples tended to develop in pockets, with close “cousins” throughout various sectors and along established inland trade routes.  This is quite true of the sugar chest.  For the novice, the sugar chest was specifically designed to store sugar in bulk.  Unlike a meal chest, which might have been delegated to the meat house or kitchen and thus removed from the primary residence altogether, sugar was so valuable to the plantation household that it was kept under lock and key in the dining room.  The high cost of sugar resulted from the fact that semi-tropical Louisiana was virtually the sole annual source for sugar and its distribution in the U.S. prior to the War Between the States, thanks in part to the Jesuit priests who had brought the sugar cane to that state in 1751.  The first sugar mill was established later that same decade by Claude-Joseph Dubreuil de Villars.  Creole planter/scientist Jean Etienne de Bore developed the process to granulate sugar around 1794, attaining success with a $12,000 sugar crop in 1795.  By 1796, there were 10 sugar refineries in Louisiana.  Shipped in hogsheads of about 1000 pounds each, of which only 5000 such barrels were produced in 1802ii, supply was greatly outweighed by demand.  It wasn’t until the advent of improved production methods and the increased importation of slaves into Louisiana, as well as efficient commercial steamboats and the charting and clearing of navigable inland waterways, that sugar could make its way to the upper South at a more reasonable cost.  Ironically, it was a free man of color, New Orleans native scientist and engineer Norbert Rillieux, who developed more efficient techniques in evaporating sugar cane juice by a vacuum pan method for the refining of sugar, and thus aided America’s most slave dependent industry. 

ca. 1885 African-American children cutting sugar cane on a Louisiana Plantation image courtesy Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York Public Library
 

Earliest American Origins
  
It is not surprising that a region which still prefers sugar in it vegetables would inspire a furniture form specifically for the storage of that sweet commodity.  Perhaps because it is so symbolic of the Southern antebellum home, there has arisen controversy over the true origins of the sugar chest.  Early attributions were to both Kentucky and Tennessee, alone and in combination, but further research would indicate an origin in Virginia and the Carolinas.  It has been hypothesized that the sugar chest emerged as a metamorphosis of the cellaret or bottle case on stand just as sugar production came to the forefront in Louisiana about 1805.  That might be so if referencing only this “classic” sugar chest form we most commonly think of, but this isn’t quite true for the chest altogether, for the earliest types of sugar chests documented seem to have been crafted just inland from coastal Virginia and North Carolina (iii) ca. 1750, with references to their use in Virginia dating back to at least that period (iv).  In essence, the sugar chest did emerge about the same time sugar came to Louisiana, just much earlier than scholars had once assumed.  Sadly, very few sugar chests have retained their full and accurate provenance to such an early period in these two states.  Estate inventories, however, prove the continued use of the form for many generations well into the 19th century, primarily in Virginia.
 
The Virginia Prototype
 
By the middle of the 18th century, the term “sugar chest” seems to have become part of the established vernacular in Virginia, so it must be assumed that settlers pouring into Kentucky and Tennessee by the 1790svi were already well aware of the wordage (vii) thus the continuation of the term’s use in estate settlement documents of the first years of the 19th century.  These “alpha” prototypes of the 18th century followed closely the construction of blanket chests, though generally of a greater capacity and height.  They were little more than enlarged blanket boxes with a divided interior to store white and brown sugar & molasses and perhaps coffee, with their sole decorative value derived from their beautifully grained walnut lumber (viii) from the old growth forests of Virginia. The best boasted simple but elegantly carved cabriole legs, then in vogue, but not with the elegant addition of ball and claw carvings. 
 
These very earliest of sugar chests thus far discovered (ix), rather surprisingly, display no real vestigial links to the equally famed Southern cellaret as might be expected.  Though the cellaret seems to pre-date the sugar chest in its use in the South by a few decades, it was actually the pattern for the next, and most prolific, generation of the sugar chest that would appear with the dawn of the 19th century.  It takes no stretch of the imagination to see that the cabinetmakers of the day would have made simple improvisational adaptations upon the cellaret, then becoming increasingly popular throughout Virginia in the Hepplewhite style (x).  This makes sense, for by the close of the 18th century, in that period of advancing Louisiana production, sugar was becoming more of a luxury commodity, just as wealth was increasing in the upper South.  As such, those earliest utilitarian forms of sugar storage were being replaced by the classical, sophisticated lines borrowed from the Hepplewhite cellaret complete with inlay ornamentation worthy of display in the owner’s finest rooms (xi).  It was a natural progression to take the general layout of the divided interior meant for the storage of wine bottles and exaggerate it to establish a pattern for the form that would thence forth be utilized for sugar storage until the War Between the States throughout Kentucky and Tennessee, and forever afterwards symbolize that mythic era of antebellum culture for the region as a whole.  
 
Sugar Chests here, there, everywhere?
 
One would be hard pressed to conclude that the Deep South was void of sugar chests, but since the need was never prevalent, the surviving examples fail to be abundant, at least not to an extent they can be easily identified and studied.  Several Mississippi sugar chests are known to have Kentucky and Tennessee origins.  Examples continue to surface in Alabama (xii), but sound provenance is seldom available to show these were actually made in that state and not simply transported there with the large scale migration to the “Black Belt” region from throughout Tennessee.  To date, little reference to sugar chests has been documented from the northern most limits of Georgia (xiii) or South Carolina (xiv), but surely some variation was utilized in the inland plantations (xv).  While ships could provide sugar to the coastal cities at a cost far reduced from that paid in the Southern “Upcountry,” some form of the sugar chest must have been crafted at some point in the large-scale plantations of the state where they still required the bulk storage of sweets.  A very crude sugar table consisting of a safe-like cupboard base with a round table top may solve that puzzle, as a few such examples of this form have surfaced with ties to the Palmetto State.  A similar table-like sugar safe has been documented to southern Louisiana.  In their simplicity, these Coastal sugar tables of the early 19th century were a throw-back to the very first basic sugar chests that applied function before form. 

 
 
Going back to the basic question of attribution of origin and the misconception that all sugar chests are from Kentucky or Tennessee, one must understand the economics of the sugar trade to understand why the chest was so important in these two states in comparison to the rest of the South.  With the advent of trade by the steamboats, improved roads, & the beginnings of rail travel, all combined with increased efficiency and output in Louisiana’s sugar industry, costs for the commodity dropped (xvi) throughout most of the South by the 2nd quarter of the nineteenth century (xvii), then marking a rise again as the 1850s progressed.  Commission, or venture, merchants like Jackson, Riddle, & Co. of Philadelphia (xviii) contracted with both Louisiana and Mississippi sugar plantations and northern iron manufacturers during the 1830s to swap commodities for goods, and ship both to the remote settlements of the inland South.  It was only in this still isolated interior of the region, in Kentucky, Tennessee, and the western portions of Virginia and N. Carolina (and perhaps north Alabama) that a need for the sugar chest did linger.  While costs for sugar still necessitated the use of the chest throughout the 1820s, by the 1840s its use in Kentucky and Tennessee was more due to tradition than to need, but ingrained enough in the local society it was still considered an important household asset (xix).  Because the sugar chest became outdated along the coast so early on with decreased sugar costs, and lingered in the back country for so many decades, we tend to think today that it was a Kentucky or Tennessee innovation.  It did, however, reach its peak popularity in those two states due mainly to its extended lifespan there.  This may have partially been due as well to a spike in sugar costs, which reached an antebellum record in 1858 (xx).  A survey of central Kentucky and Middle Tennessee estate inventories would verify the continued use of the sugar chest into the 1860s, likely due to that sharp rise in prices that would have affected this region of the upper South more than any other.
 
Besides migrating south, sugar chests were also carried north by 19th century farmers who retained the pioneer spirit of their ancestors and kept moving in search of cheaper land and better opportunities.  Some Kentuckians and Tennesseans never moved, but speculated on lands in the Midwest and set up homes there, sometimes relocating agents or overseers.  Either way, furniture from the upper South made its way early on to states like Ohio, Illinois or Indiana, causing many fine sugar chests to lose their true regional identities forever (xxi).
 
 
Alternative Forms
 
As already indicated, the sugar chest was not limited to one design.  While most all were constructed around a single bin or series of such bins, the presentation took many unique characteristics.  The most common and best known is the divided box set upon a frame, the earliest of which transitioned from the blanket chest, followed by a more sophisticated variance of the cellaret, both forms being carried westward from Virginia and the Carolinas into Kentucky and Tennessee where both styles would persist.  The Federal slant front desk, so popular throughout the Shenandoah Valley, would be redesigned in Kentucky’s inner Bluegrass as a sugar desk by the time of the next war with England (xxii).  Such a form served multiple uses, as it could function as a working desk, while beneath the writing surface was located the bin for storage of sugar.  Drawers below allowed for the keeping of sugar nippers, spices, and perhaps even linens for the dining room.  This extra storage was especially possible in the lesser seen sugar bureau and sugar press.  These oddities mimicked larger pieces of furniture by adding extra storage capacity and utility to the basic sugar chest.  Less formal were the sugar tables, which provided a work surface in the kitchen with storage capability for sugar.  A close relation, but more refined, was the sugar chest modeled after the better known Southern hunt board.  These had a combination of drawers and bins with false drawer fronts, accessed by lifting a hinged section of the top board.  These may also have served as mixing tables for drinks.  Another scarce form of sugar chest is the smallest of practical sizes.  While true miniatures and children’s toy sizes (likely cabinet makers’ samples) are known, the least studied are the portable sugar boxes.  More plentiful in East Tennessee, these are found as well in Central Kentucky.  Just as the cellaret came in a modified traveling size, the sugar chest was also shrunk down to a portable box, compact enough to be kept on the sideboard to lock away cut sugar within easy access of the dining table.  As sugar came in large cones, it was convenient to cut the sugar ahead of time and lock away the coin silver sugar bowl in addition to the cones themselves (xxiii). 

Sugar Bureau, Likely Fayette County, Kentucky from the Bob & Norma Noe Collection, Speed Museum Louisville KY
 
Whatever the style or state of origin, the sugar chest is a distinctly American and uniquely Southern form that today symbolizes for many an entire culture swept away by a war that shapes our nation to this day.  Our current fascination with the sugar chest and similar regional relics was best explained by one of the South’s most beloved advocates many decades ago.  To quote Kentucky historian Dr. Thomas D. Clark as he wrote for the 1947 Kentucky issue of “The Magazine Antiques,” “In this worship of the traditional, relics and mementoes have been preserved, but few families have been vitally concerned with keeping an important manuscript record of the past.  Things, rather than records,… have always been marks of distinction….Thus a complex mixture of environmental and sectional influences have shaped the lives and culture of the Kentucky people.  They have preserved the main frontier characteristic of individualism, and their provincial natures have enabled them to cling steadfastly to the old ways in many of their customs.  In the popular mind the old days were the best.  It is impossible for the modern individual to recapture the full spirit of those earlier days so that it may be intermingled with a modern and even more complex society, but it is possible to cling tenaciously to the symbols of the earlier period.  History has been important to Kentuckians.  Few places in the country have given more time to the study of local history, or made it the basis for a greater local pride. The individual Kentuckian has concerned himself not too much with the full social and contemporary implications of history, but rather with its sweet and nostalgic overtones.  To him its mixtures of tradition and obscurity have been sources of personal dignity.”

 i Wealth and leisure came early to the coastal South, primarily to Charleston and Tidewater Virginia.  The author defers all respect to his Fitzhugh, Randolph, Bland and Byrd ancestors who were the exceptions to the rule for most Southern society. 
ii One of the best works on agrarian economy in antebellum Louisiana, courtesy of the Louisiana State Museum, “A Medley of Cultures.”  
iii At least one sugar chest, in desk form and in a vernacular Chippendale styling, is known to the author.  This walnut sugar desk of ca. 178-90 retains a long provenance to the Bluegrass of Kentucky back to the 1820s, but from a family who had migrated from the Carolinas.  Its holly inlay use and yellow pine secondary wood indicate that this was a prized possession brought with the family through the Cumberland Gap into Kentucky from North Carolina. Such an example reinforces the conjecture that not only styles, but examples of cabinets which would later be copied, were carried westward into the far reaches of the “Back Country” South.
 iv Likely one of the first period references to the term “sugar chest” is found in the ledgers of the “Partridge Store” which served planters in the Hanover and Louisa County, Virginia area throughout the 2nd quarter of the 18th century.  Their surviving ledgers for 1756, in the account for William Hendrick (son of William Sr. of Amelia County who died ca. 1739) of that year, show among his 28 purchases that year ten hoes, 12 plates, a woman’s cloak, a fan, a sugar chest and lock, and a set of teaware. 
v York County, Virginia May 16th, 1763, the inventory of estate of Samuel Tompkins includes a “sugar chest”.  Colonial Williamsburg files 
vi CWFL film M-1060.2 James Anderson Accounts, 1778-1799, Ledger c, p. 11 references the work of the Williamsburg, Virginia blacksmith in “mending sugar chest” for his neighbor Dr. Barraud. 
vii Estate inventories from prior to1800 are scant anyway, but the use of the term “sugar chest” seems to occur on a regular basis in Kentucky and Tennessee sometime prior to 1810.  Anne S. McPherson, in her article An Abode of Sweetness, the Sugar Chest and Sugar Box, cites an early reference to the use in the January 1805 inventory of Thomas Bedford, Rutherford County, TN Wills & Inventories, Book 2, page 2. 
viii This early Virginia form would linger primarily in south central Kentucky well into the 1840s, while the inner Bluegrass Region as well as Middle Tennessee would transition to a form based upon the cellaret. ix Sandra Crowther collection, Lynchburg Va.- lower Tidewater origin in the Queen Anne style ca. 1750-60                                                                                                                                               
x Paul H. Burroughs in his classic 1931 reference Southern Antiques, references a cellaret of North Carolina origin which he dates to ca. 1690-1700, as well as Queen Anne versions from both North and South Carolina from the 1720’s on. 
xi Inlaid sugar chests are virtually unknown outside of Tennessee and Kentucky, with considerable scarcity even from Tennessee.  The lack of such sophisticated ornamentation cannot, however, be the sole determination of status or wealth of the original owners.  Some of the finest plantation homes of Middle Tennessee, as surveyed in Williamson County, boasted very simple sugar chests in their dining rooms.  Reference Rick Warwick’s Williamson County: More Than a Good Place to Live, 2005. 
xii There has been documented a Chippendale variety from ca. 1780 sitting low to the ground with fine ogee feet which surfaced in Alabama with a Tennessee provenance though, as with many early Tennessee antiques, it likely was brought into the state from North Carolina. 
xiii The historic “Bobo House” in Union County, South Carolina displays a sugar chest, but it retains a provenance of having been brought by the family to SC at the turn of the 18th century from Baltimore. xiv Will Book- Oglethorpe County, Georgia July 24th, 1868, “I, Mary Ann Black, being of sound and disposing mind and memory do make, publish and declare this to be my last Will and Testament hereby revoking all other wills by me before made.  Item 1st I give and bequest unto Charles Filmore Sanders son of William J. Sanders my bed that I now sleep on and the furniture with it and one small chest known as my sugar chest, and one small round trunk.” 
xv An Upson County, GA sugar chest of poplar & yellow pine from ca. 1840-60 resided in the collection of William & Florence Griffin.  See Neat Pieces- the Plain Style Furniture of 19th Century Georgia, #81. 
xvi See California Digital Library “Sugar and Origins of Modern Philippine Society” for an interesting overview of “global” sugar economies as they impacted one small agrarian island nation 
xvii Parrelling the dropping cost of sugar, the sugar chest in the estate inventories of the mid-19th century reflect a serious devaluation.  Period auction prices referenced include the following:  Bullitt Co. Ky Will Book D- Richard Brashear estate March 17th 1851, “A sugar chest was sold to “Old Lady”/Widow Sarah for .75 cents”; Garrard Co. Ky Order Book P. pgs 436-37 Emanual Higginbotham estate, to “Martha Baugh 1 sugar chest and little wheel $1.90”; Barren Co. Ky Inventory Book 6:355 John King estate Dec. 2nd, 1851, to “Thomas king, sugar chest $4.60”; Washington Co. Ky Will Book J-601 J T Jarboe estate December 4th 1856,  to “Mahala Jarboe one sugar chest $1.00” 
xviii For details on the trade practices of this firm, references their records in the following collections:  Southard Papers, Princeton Library, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, and “Records of Ante-Bellum Southern Plantations” in the Southern Historical Collection, University of NC-Chapel Hill 
xix Reference Scott County, Ky mortgage book pates 17-18, and indenture between James Moore and William Moore conveying in exchange for previously mortgaged debt by the Branch Bank of Kentucky a tract of “100 acres on Lane’s run and …the following Negro slaves to wit:  Nancy, Jane, Tom, Lucinda, George, Harvey, John, Henry, also twelve head of horses, one cart & yoke of oxen, six head of cattle, sixteen head of stock hogs, six head of sheep, twenty barrels of corn, three beds, bedstands, and furniture, two bureaus, one sugar chest, and one clock & about 12 acres of hemp unbroken.” 2/25/1843 xx Louisiana State Museum, “A Medley of Cultures”, Hickman-Bryan Papers, the University of Missouri, Louisiana History Timeline, Louisiana Educational Television, John Gurley Papers, Louisiana State University (after the war, prices plunged to .25 cents a pound- Charles T. Daggs letter 2/11/1866) xxi Clark County, Ohio Will Book- will of John Winn (of Springfield) to his wife Hosea Ballou Winn “ my carriage and harness, all my farming utensils, my brass clock, my silver plate, the whole of my household of kitchen furniture, including my secretary, bookcase of books, desk, beer can, sugar chest, beds of furniture”  Per “A Lineage & Brief History of the Rawlings Family” Urbana Ohio 1931, “John Winn was a Virginian by birth, and that he emigrated to Fleming County, Kentucky about the year 1796.  This account says that “He came to Kentucky from Virginia in an ox cart with no property save a Negro boy and his cattle.”  When he came to Ohio, a free state, he freed all his slaves and gave his name as security for their good behaviour.”  Purnell short was born 9/29/1779 in Scott County, Kentucky.  He migrated to Greene County Illinois by ox team in the fall of 1833 and settled south of Carrollton, Illinois, dying 2/14/1851.  From the Greene Co., Ill. Record Book C-346, “For a consideration of $37.00 on March 15, 1832, Purnell Short apparently took a chattel mortgage from James Self on one waton and gears, one bay mare and sorrel mare with one eye, one sorrel horse, two beds and bedding, a table and candlestand, one sugar chest, a cupboard and other household goods for 35 acres of land valued at $67.62.”                                                                                                                xxii Scott County, KY Will Books A-B, John Stites Estate February 24th, 1812 references the sale of his “sugar desk” to R. M. Gano for $5.75. 
xxiii Author’s collection- a walnut sugar box on four turned legs, Fayette County, Ky. origin measuring not quite 17" in height.

Friday, May 22, 2020

Kentucky Prison Chairs; A Brief Summary History

A Brief Examination of the Beginnings of Kentucky's Correctional Industries

by Gary Dean Gardner, Independent Scholar

(A PROLOGUE- Since I wrote this piece back in mid-2017, I believe Mel Hankla has since included some additional data on the matter in his book on Kentucky material culture released this spring of 2020 that includes a cameo look at Kentucky's penitentiary-made chairs.  I'm glad that additional attention is being given to this early Kentucky industry.)

Kentucky State Reformatory


Sadly, there is little reference material published on any of the varied state penitentiary crafts to further our current research into regional Kentucky decorative arts & material culture.  Many objects were manufactured by prisoners throughout the South during the 19th century, from fine leather work in Virginia to the noted fancy chairs of the Kentucky State Penitentiary.  The Kentucky state furniture industry, as overseen by the Commonwealth prison system, was actually quite early, and they made more than just porch rockers and court house arm chairs.  Annual reports from the prison system indicate the inmates in Kentucky did leather work, too, just as was done in Virginia, as well as rope and bag manufacture (yes, prisoners had access to hemp!) blacksmithing, and saddle & harness making.  In fact, those reports give the best insight into the workings of this unorthodox craft industry in the Bluegrass.

We sometimes see a date of 1826 in attributing an origin to the chair-making at the Kentucky State Penitentiary, and certainly that aspect of the prison industries was thriving by then, but, the chair making industry there is actually much older.  John S. Hunter was one of the first “keepers” of the Penitentiary, serving in that capacity from 1798 until 1815.  In his report to the State Legislature for 1805 we find recorded that, “At a called meeting in the latter part of August (1805), one of the guards was ordered to be discharged for intemperance, and the agent ordered to employ Thomas Elliott to superintend the chair making business."

Later such reports to the Commonwealth provide us more detail about the chair manufacture business.    A joint committee report from 13th January 1817 states, "The convicts appear to be well clothed, and properly employed in different branches of mechanical occupations, which evi(de)nces the skill, judgment, and good management of the keeper.”  This report goes on to enumerate the specific assignments to the varied “factories” of the prison, including, “engaged in the nail manufactory- 18 men, blacksmith's business- 6 men, chair making- 8 men, shoemaking- 9 men, stone cutting- 11 men."
 
An inventory prematurely taken in 1819 entitled “Raw materials on hand in the Kentucky Penitentiary 18th January, 1820” lists 600 fee of chair plank valued at $18.00, along with Sundry unfinished chairs, paints, etc. belonging to chair department with a worth of $559.25.  The 1st October 1819 inventory of finished chairs shows the success of the chair making venture over the course of those prior 15+ years.  It recorded these completed products ready for sale:  2 chairs   3.00 1 chair   1.25 363 chairs   726.00 1 settee  16.00 2 settees  24.00 1 settee  15.00 1 cribb [sic}  5.00 1 cribb [sic]  4.50 1 rocking chair  4.50 6 rocking chairs  24.00 3 rocking chairs  10.50 3 chairs   6.75 8 chairs   12.00 1 chair   3.50 2 rocking chairs  5.00 4 small chairs  6.00

The total inventory was appraised at $3,205.37, with the most expensive chairs costing $3.50 each, rockers priced at up to $4.50, and “settees” or Windsor style benches being the highest priced seating available at $16.00.  

Future “keepers” continued the established tradition of making chairs.  In the 1825 Journal of the Kentucky House of Representatives we find the report of Joel Scott, "Keeper of the Penitentiary," in which he records the value of "Articles manufactured" at a whopping $13,575.83! Scott declared to the Legislature that, "I still continue the chair making, shoe making, coopering, wagon making, etc. and have made various other improvements." By 1827 the prison was making goods on contract for the Kentucky State Senate chamber and, while not delineated, this order must have included chairs.
Vocational training was a primary interest by the middle of the 1800s.  Sneed’s history of the penitentiary industries relates that, “During the five years ending as above (31 Dec 1859), 580 prisoners were received, who were unacquainted with any mechanical business.  Of this number there were taught to weave, 163; cane seating, 137; shoemaking, 163; chair-making, 21; varnishing, 8; boot crimping, 3; segar-making, 4; broom-making, 2; blacksmithing, 1; and burnishing, 4; 75 were employed at various kinds of labor pertaining to the operations of the institution.”



Later 19th century “keepers” found it more profitable to bring in private industry to oversee the prison labor force.  A state report from 1893 explains, “For a number of years prior to April 1st, 1893, the labor of the convicts was leased to the Mason & Foard Company, and the company fed and clothed them.  At that time this contract with the State expired, and since then the State has been supporting them.  No. 14 shows what has been bought for their support by the Warden from April 1st, 1893, to November 30th, 1893.
 
Your Honorable Board has, within the last two months, bought and put into the Penitentiary a plant of machinery for manufacturing chairs.  Some of the machinery is now at work, and chairs are being turned out.   Under a contract with Norman & Hubbard, the State is to deliver to them $18,000 worth per month, which will be about one thousand chairs per day.  I have every reason to believe that the factory will be turning out the above number by the 20th of the month.  This will give employment to over onehalf the convicts, and will certainly be profitable to the State. A table marked “Chair Plant and Material” show the cost of the plant and material up to December 1st… 

There are now on hand eleven hundred and one convicts, and only eight hundred and eighty cells, none of which was intended for more than one to occupy.  I am compelled, therefore, to sleep a number of them in one of the shop-rooms.  The cell-house now being constructed will have four hundred and eight cells.  By the time it is completed, should the rate of increase continue, there will be enough convicts inside the walls to fill it.  All of which I respectfully submit. 

 Yours obediently, HENRY GEORGE, Warden. 

CHAIR PLANT AND MATERIAL 

Chair Plant and Material Purchased to December 1, 1893.
CHAIR PLANT- $19,622.11
LUMBER- $18,811.02 
MATERIAL- $1,248.58
CANING- $7,821.78
FINISHING- $2,228.50
UPHOLSTERY- $652.65
PACKING- $35.78 

Total purchased to December 1st- $49,880.42
Salaries Superintendent and Foremen- $630.17
Total outlay- $50,510.59


The early 20th century found Kentucky’s prison system still perpetuating the making of what by then must have been long-appreciated quality in chairs.  In 1901, $25,000 was appropriated by the Legislature for a new chair making factory at the Penitentiary.  By 1910, the Kentucky State Penitentiary chair factory was operating as a contracted subsidiary company, providing labor & product for both "Kentucky Furniture Company" and "New England Chair Company.”  These enterprises were working 350 men a day for between $.35 cents and $.75 cents. 

While Kentucky Penitentiary fancy chairs, with their unique bent arms, are known to collectors, virtually nothing has been printed about their history and importance in the annals of Kentucky antiques.  Hopefully future scholarship will fill in some vital gaps about these beloved chairs.

See Sneed, Wm. C., A Report on the History and Mode of Management of the Kentucky Penitentiary, Frankfort, KY 1860.
Swango, G. B., Report of the Register of the Kentucky Land Office October 10, 1893.
Journal of the House of Representative of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, Kendall & Russells, Frankfort, 1819

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

The Face of Lincoln by a Kentuckian's Hands

Exploring a Forgotten Artisan of the Bluegrass and a Rare Surviving Lincoln Portrait

by Gary Dean Gardner, Independent Scholar

When the distinctions between art and pop culture become blurred in a "symbiotic fusion" of iconographic imagery, it is easy to become desensitized.   Artistic representations that have been duplicated “en masse” for long periods of time, even generations, become a part of society’s collective consciousness. This is especially true of the faces of political power through the ages, those whose images become symbolic of whole eras and movements in history. Such is the case of the classic profile of Lincoln.

By the time of the War Between the States, northern industrialism was dawning with mass production its offspring. Political campaigns of the day became among the first to reap the benefits of inexpensively produced images intended to brand a face and name on the minds of the people. The goal was a success. Abraham Lincoln became the most widely photographed president at that time, with his image spread across the country and the world through cheap studio photographs, tokens, buttons and badges.

Perhaps the most prolific version distributed of Lincoln's face was the bust in profile, cast in relief in a variety of medium. Popular especially after Lincoln’s assassination, these “sculptures for the masses” are copied to this day as affordable historical souvenirs. That being the case, and considering the eclipsing fame of name-recognized 19th century celebrity artists, it is no surprise that our collective “art memory” has lapsed regarding the naive, perhaps untrained, Kentucky sculptor who first imagined what devolved into this icon of classical kitsch.

3.5" h x 2" w bronze relief profile (6" diameter wooden mounting)
signed in ink on reverse William Thomas Bausmith and dated 1863


William Thomas Bausmith never set out to design a tourist trinket. The native of Maryland was a trained, versatile mechanic turned artistic sculptor. He modeled his famous Lincoln profile at the height of the war in 1863, long before mourners would begin clamoring for a keepsake of the "martyred" president after his death at the hands of another Marylander, John Wilkes Booth, just two years later.

22" relief bronze by Franklin Simmons 1865


There is striking similarity between Bausmith's small, simple rendering and the better remembered, even famed "from life" profile accomplished by renowned Maine sculptor Franklin Simmons (1839-1913) on contract for William H. Miller and Sons Foundry of Providence, Rhode Island in 1865.  And to be fair, the 22" diameter disc-form bronze plaque by Simmons, which was displayed alongside a collection of such bronze profiles of other Union generals and dignitaries  throughout many northern cities in the days after Lincoln's assasination, likely was the true proto-type for many copies and variants of this very likeness.  It is just fortunate that the surviving casting by Bausmith so carefully recorded the year it was created to help substantiate it pre-dates the Miller and Sons commission and that he didn't simply copy the later Simmons version. The question remains as to whether Bausmith could have possibly created his Lincoln profile from life as Simmons had done, or if he merely utilized the plethora of photographs and engravings so commonly available during Lincoln's presidency.
  
Little is recorded of the early life of Bausmith in the bustling industrial port city of Baltimore. He was born there on the 15th June 1840 to Phillip and Amelia Bausmith. Phillip (b. ca. 1807) was a native of Alsace-Lorraine who had immigrated to Maryland in the 1820s and continued his "old world" trade of tailor. Phillip married Amelia Huffman in 1838 in the Zion Lutheran Church and they became the parents at least 3 sons. (i) 

Of those three boys virtually nothing is known of the early years of William Thomas, our subject. No documentation has yet surfaced regarding William’s artistic inclination or training, but in his teens William was likely apprenticed by his father into the foundry trade in which he certainly excelled. By his early 20’s Bausmith was in business for himself, taking a relation for a partner in the firm of “Bausmith & Bauer.” He had married Naomi Ann Gilbert in Baltimore.  They would become the parents of six surviving children.

A unit of the Maryland First Light Artillery U.S.


In the 1864 city directory for Baltimore the partnership of "Bausmith & Bauer" was listed as brass founders on Uhler’s Alley between Charles and Hanover. Shortly thereafter, on March 23rd, 1864, William T. Bausmith enlisted as a private in Co. D. of the Maryland 1st Light Artillery (U.S.). He served until the end of the war, mustering out on June 24th, 1865. (ii) It was sometime just prior to his documented military service that Bausmith modeled his classic rendering of sitting President Abraham Lincoln. His hand-inked notation on the reverse of the mounting of his own existing model indicates that he created this original casting in 1863.

As we can conclude that Bausmith was residing in Baltimore until at least late in the war, it is interesting to speculate what prompted the design of his bronze profile of Lincoln. The most logical conclusion, correlating with his own notated date, is that Bausmith made his preliminary designs around November 18th -19th of 1863, when Lincoln would have been passing through Baltimore on the way to the dedication of the national cemetery at Gettysburg. Many Marylanders were in attendance, in fact, so it is highly plausible that he saw Lincoln first-hand either at the Baltimore station or at the dedication itself. (Interestingly, Rigby’s Battery “A” of the Maryland 1st Light Artillery fought with the Army of the Potomac at Gettysburg. (iii) Perhaps the devastating losses there prompted his later service with his fellow Baltimoreans.) 

Maryland Institute where Lincoln Spoke


But for this single trip, there is no record of Lincoln having been anywhere else near the city that year. (iv) Lincoln did, however, visit Baltimore the following year, but that was on the 18th April 1864 following Bausmith’s enlistment. On that visit Lincoln delivered his “Freedom Speech” at a fair to benefit Union troops at the Maryland Institute College of Art. (v) This brings up the question of whether Bausmith might have been a student or member of the Institute prior to the War. Since his unit was primarily left in the city for the defenses of Baltimore, Thomas Bausmith could very likely have attended Lincoln’s address, especially were he a student there. Though this is a speculative theory, it would help explain just how and why someone finding their vocation in operation of a brass foundry could evolve into such a clearly talented sculptor. The documented visits of Lincoln also provide ample opportunity for Bausmith’s life model of the President. 

Institute Interior 1864 where Lincoln Presided over opening ceremonies
 of the event for soldier relief


The years immediately following the War found Bausmith residing in Aberdeen, Harford County, Maryland, where he expressed his continued mechanical ingenuity if not his artistic endeavors. (vi) The exact date of his removal from Maryland to Kentucky is unknown, but it was after 1875. (vii) He was certainly living in the Commonwealth of Kentucky by 1877 when his son, Frank Leon Bausmith, was born (viii) in Ludlow (Kenton County) Kentucky. 

View of Ludlow, KY ca. 1908


Mr. Bausmith was still residing in Ludlow, Kentucky in 1883, as he filed a patent in that year for a compound to strengthen sand to more cleanly remove castings. (ix) This would likely indicate a return to his involvement in the sculptural arts with cross-over application to industrial applications as in Bausmith’ s early days in Baltimore. His address would change over the next two decades, for we find him in nearby Bellevue in 1897. Here again we find some proof of his occupational transformation, for he is listed in the city directory as a “molder” at 35 Ward Avenue. (x) It would seem by this perioed he earned his living more closely to his calling as sculptor, likely in one of the firms like Verdin’s of Cincinnati. 

There is no record of Bausmith’s retirement from the bronze casting industry in southern Ohio, but we know he remained a Kentucky resident, and in his later years, like many Union veterans, became active in the G.A.R., serving in 1904 as Commander of the Department of Kentucky, Grand Army of the Republic. (xi)

So, was William Thomas Bausmith a mere Maryland mechanic, or a forgotten Kentucky artist?  I would contend the evidence proves both. Sadly, we have no body of work, only a single existing bronze to document Bausmith's talents.

(I) Phillip and Amelia Huffman Bausmith were the parents of William Thomas, Charles, and Phillip Jr., but may also have been the parents of Frederick.  As records indicate William and Frederick Bausmith were the same age & served in the same unit of the Md. Artillery, they may have been twins or at least 1st cousins. 
(ii) “Maryland Volunteers; War of 1861-1865” 
(iii) The Civil War Archive- Union Regimental Histories (Maryland) 
(iv) Monthly/Daily events of Lincoln’s life as recorded by the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency via the “The Lincoln Log” 
(v) MICA History; 1826-Present 
(vi) Files of the United State Patent Office #112886 from March 21, 1871- Bausmith files a patent for an improved window sash mechanism. 
(vii) Bausmith’s son William Penn was born in Baltimore County, Maryland 11/20/1872. W. P. Bausmith moved later to Northern Kentucky as well and worked early in the 20th century as an architect. A daughter, Ozella Amelia Bausmith, died in the city of Baltimore on 2.24.1875. 
(viii) 5/8/1877 
(ix) U. S. Patent Office files #270625 
(x) Bellevue 1897 City Directory; A-D, Williams & Co. Publishers (Brother Frank was listed in the same household as a clerk.) 
(xi) Archives of the Kentucky G.A.R.- list of commanders