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Just something old to play with

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Woodworking
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  • C Offline
    CJRyan
    last edited by 17 Feb 2019, 20:09

    This item was commissioned to Thomas Constantine in 1819. He built 48 of them.

    I personally think the piece is too heavy. But I guess it was built to withstand lot's of abuse, like fists being pounded on the desktop. As they are still intact today the price of $34 dollars was a good deal.

    Apparently, by 1896 there was so much hot air in the room that defusers were added to the feet for addition fresh air.

    The original design was modified in the early 1900's with the addition of a second compartment on the top.Senate Desk3.jpg

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    • D Offline
      davidheim1
      last edited by 18 Feb 2019, 03:19

      Very nice model. Was the original a school desk? Something for a legislature?

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      • C Offline
        CJRyan
        last edited by 18 Feb 2019, 03:48

        David, this is one of the now 100 desks in the US Senate.

        I had to do a lot of guessing, apparently, the first 48 were all different and it showed in all the different photos I looked at.

        The last four were built in 1959 when Alaska and Hawaii became states.

        They have a rich history.

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        U.S. Senate: 404 Error Page

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        • H Offline
          HornOxx
          last edited by 18 Feb 2019, 05:40

          ...a good idea to model this particular "a lot of guessing" furniture 😄 Thanks for sharing it!

          never trust a skinny cook

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          • T Offline
            tuna1957
            last edited by 18 Feb 2019, 16:19

            Nice 👍

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            • C Offline
              CJRyan
              last edited by 18 Feb 2019, 18:27

              Thank's all. I stumbled across this while I was researching something else, and was fascinated by the history of the desks.

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