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  2. Kittinger Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kittinger_Company

    Advertising in 1904, [3] Colie and Son illustrated one of their armchairs, that showed they were still making furniture in the free Colonial Revival style for their "snappy, original styles in Parlor Suites, Odd Chairs, Divans, Easy Chairs etc." Reproductions more closely based on original American 18th-century pieces of furniture would come to ...

  3. Virginia furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virginia_furniture

    Anthony Hay made furniture in Colonial Williamsburg. As the colony grew, other furniture makers developed in Norfolk, Fredericksburg, Alexandria and Petersburg. [2] In Fredericksburg alone, more than a dozen manufacturers made European-style furniture in facilities owned by cabinetmakers such as Robert and Alexander Walker, James Allen and ...

  4. Eliphalet Chapin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eliphalet_Chapin

    In the 18th century, Philadelphia was one of the most important cities both before and after the American Revolution and was a center of style and culture. [1] At age 30, he returned to Connecticut, building a home and workshop in East Windsor where he spent the rest of his life, operating his furniture making shop from 1771 through 1798.

  5. Duncan Phyfe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duncan_Phyfe

    Duncan Phyfe (1768 – 16 August 1854) [1] was one of nineteenth-century America's leading cabinetmakers.. Rather than create a new furniture style, he interpreted fashionable European trends in a manner so distinguished and particular that he became a major spokesman for Neoclassicism in the United States, influencing a generation of American cabinetmakers.

  6. Goddard and Townsend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goddard_and_Townsend

    A single mahogany secretary bookcase made by Christopher Townsend (John's father) in 1740 sold at auction in New York for $8.25 million. John Goddard made a famous six-shell desk-bookcase for Providence merchant Nicholas Brown, Sr. It was sold by the Brown family in 1989, for $12.1 million — a record for a piece of American furniture at auction.

  7. American Empire style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Empire_style

    As an early-19th-century design movement in the United States, it encompassed architecture, furniture and other decorative arts, as well as the visual arts. In American furniture, the Empire style was most notably exemplified by the work of New York cabinetmakers Duncan Phyfe and Paris-trained Charles-Honoré Lannuier.