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Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Title
Mantel at Hardwicke
Object ID
P.77.31.66
Date Range
Oct. 1881
  1 image  
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Title
Mantel at Hardwicke
Description
Watercolor on paper, depicting a mantel and fireplace. the mantel has numerous decorations along the top and down both sides, the largest of which, in the center, show a group of roman soldiers, lions and cherubs. the two gold andirons have devils' head on top.
The caption on the bottom reads 'MANTEL AT "HARDWICKE" LANCASTER PA: DEMOLISHED NOV: 1881/BUILT'
The neoclassical composition ornaments were probably by the notes Philadelphia manufacturer Robert Wellford. When Hardwicke was demolished in 1881, this mantel was purchased by Andre Jackson Steinman for use in his house on the corner of E. Orange and N. Shippen Streets. It is still in that building, which is now the Showcase of Fashion. (Written by Scott Sager)
Date Range
Oct. 1881
Creator
Stauffer, David McNeely, 1845-1913
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
DAC
Storage Cabinet
Cabinet 2
Storage Shelf
Shelf 4
Storage Container
Box 0066
People
Stauffer, David McNeely
Steinman, Andrew Jackson
Frame
Window mat only.
Image Size
10.25 x 7.25 inches
Object Name
Drawing
Material
Paper
Medium
Drawing
Height (cm)
13.0175
Height (ft)
0.4270833333
Height (in)
5.125
Width (cm)
17.4625
Width (ft)
0.5729166667
Width (in)
6.875
Dimension Details
This piece is currently float-mounted in hinged window matting.
Condition
Good
Condition Date
2000-12-13
Condition Notes
Small brown marks appear in the upper right area of the picture. There are remains of a previous backing on the corners of the reverse.
The piece is currently float-mounted in hinged window matting.
Object ID
P.77.31.66
Place of Origin
Manheim Twp.
Role
Artist
Credit
Acquired through the generosity of the James Hale Steinman Foundation, Heritage Center Collection
Accession Number
P.77.31
Images
Less detail
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Object ID
P.77.02
Date Range
c. 1835
  1 image  
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Description
Empire style chest of drawers, mahogany veneer on pine or poplar. Four drawers, each with two pressed glass pulls & keyhole and each with bookmatched veneer of highly figured mahogany. The top drawer overhangs lower drawers and has a curved front (top-to-bottom), while the three lower drawers have flat fronts. Freestanding ionic columns flank drawers with carved plinths. Sunken panel construction at sides. Two extensively carved paw feet in front; two ball feet in back.
In April 1982, the entire case was disassembled and discovered to be signed and dated by Markley, behind the left front stile above the column. (Not seen in 2011. Inscription appears on top of thick drawer divider supporting top drawer.) Also stamped by maker within oval on upper surface of top drawer bottom: "J.F. MARKLEY/ CABINETMAKER/ Locust Street/ COLUMBIA."
According to file, the 1830-1846 Columbia Borough tax records list Markley variously as a doctor, cabinetmaker, contractor or gent.
See also a gentleman's dressing table with mirror, P00.39.01.
Date Range
c. 1835
Year Range From
1825
Year Range To
1840
Creator
Markley, Jacob Fry, 1800-1854
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
Admin Lobby
People
Markley, Jacob Fry
Subject
Bedroom furniture
Cabinetmakers
Chests of drawers
Dressers (Chests of drawers)
Furniture
Search Terms
Bedroom furniture
Cabinetmakers
Chests of drawers
Dressers
Furniture
Object Name
Dresser
Material
Wood, Glass, Iron
Condition
Good
Condition Date
2017-11-20
Condition Notes
Piece of veneer 1.5" x 0.5" is missing from top right above drawer. Small spots and scratches overall, and two large cracks on top: one near front right corner, and one at rear center, partially filled in. The left pull on the second drawer up from the bottom is split in half; held in place with string windings.
Two toes on the right front foot were pieced and recarved by Joseph Molz of Lancaster City. Some veneer was also pieced.
Object ID
P.77.02
Notes
More info in file. There was a discrepancy in the research with two different Jacob Markleys. It appears that the maker of this chest of drawers was Jacob Fry Markley (1800-1854), born in boro of Strasburg to parents Jacob Markley, Sr. (1765-1829) and Barbara Fry Markley. Jacob Sr. was also a cabinetmaker.
Son Jacob is listed with different occupations over the years. He was living in Columbia in 1830 and possibly as late as 1841. He moved to Spring Grove, Philadelphia County by 1850 and is listed as a druggist in the 1850 Census with wife Ann & 5 children. "JACOB F. MARKLEY M.D." is on his tombstone in the Hatboro Cemetery. Thus Jacob Markley claimed to be a cabinetmaker, druggist and doctor (Doctor is perhaps what he called a pharmacist).
Place of Origin
Columbia
Role
Cabinetmaker
Credit
Gift of the James Hale Steinman Foundation, Heritage Center Coll
Accession Number
P.77.02
Images
Less detail
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Title
Hardwicke Mansion
Object ID
P.77.31.10
Date Range
Nov. 1881
  1 image  
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Title
Hardwicke Mansion
Description
Watercolor on paper of the Hardwicke mansion; beige coloring with gray/white roof and columns, green shutters on windows. The main section of the house has a grand elliptical facade with four monumental columns. The section adjacent to this has arched windows. The house continues in several smaller sections to the viewer's right; one of these sections is a greenhouse. The surrounding area is filled with grass and trees. NOT FOUND IN BOX 0066, July 2023
The painting has a caption at the bottom which reads '"HARDWICKE" NEAR LANCASTER PA'. The painting is dated "Nov. 1881" in the lower right corner.
Hardwicke was the country seat of the attorney and judge Charles Smith who married Jasper Yeates' daughter; it was built east of Lancaster, overlooking the Conestoga River, in about 1804. It may have been designed by Stephen Hills, who also designed the Old Capital Building in Harrisburg. John J. Snyder states the house was "the most sophisticated and most elegant Federal mansion in Lancaster County." He says the Smiths moved to Baltimore in the 1820s, after which a son of ironmaster Robert Coleman owned the building.
Hardwicke later became the summer home of the Cassatt family where artist Mary Cassatt was born (1844). Apparently a Colonel Wiley owned it when the railroad demolished it in Nov. 1881.
Date Range
Nov. 1881
Year Range From
1881
Year Range To
1881
Creator
Stauffer, David McNeely, 1845-1913
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
DAC
Storage Cabinet
Cabinet 2
Storage Shelf
Shelf 2
Storage Container
Box 0067
People
Stauffer, David McNeely
Search Terms
Drawings
Hardwicke
Frame
Window mat only.
Image Size
4 x 8.125 inches
Object Name
Painting
Oither Names
Watercolor
Material
Paper, Ink
Medium
Painting, Watercolor
Related Publications
J.W.W. Loose, The Heritage of Lancaster, pp.74-75.
Height (cm)
10.16
Height (ft)
0.3333333333
Height (in)
4
Width (cm)
20.6375
Width (ft)
0.6770833333
Width (in)
8.125
Dimension Details
Hinged within a window mat..
Condition
Good
Condition Date
2017-06-28
Condition Notes
The front of the painting is in almost perfect condition, except for a few small brown dots; the reverse has several glue stains in the corners and along the sides where the paper was apparently attached to a previous backing.
Mounted in a hinged window mat.
Object ID
P.77.31.10
Place of Origin
Manheim Twp.
Role
Artist
Credit
Acquired through the generosity of the James Hale Steinman Foundation, Heritage Center Collection
Accession Number
P.77.31
Images
Less detail
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Object ID
HC-79-02-52
  1 image  
Object Name
Print, Photographic
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Description
Steel framework for building at construction site - possibly Lancaster Municipal Airport
Provenance
Photographs from the collection of the Heritage Center
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Subcategory
Documentary Artifact
Search Terms
Construction
Airports
A. B. Rote & Co.
Place
Manheim Twp.
Object Name
Print, Photographic
Print Size
3.5 x 5.75 inches
Object ID
HC-79-02-52
Images
Less detail
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Object ID
HC-79-02-53
  1 image  
Object Name
Print, Photographic
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Description
Steel framework for building at construction site - possibly Armstrong Cork Company
Provenance
Photographs from the collection of the Heritage Center
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Subcategory
Documentary Artifact
Search Terms
Construction
Armstrong
A. B. Rote & Co.
Place
Manheim Twp.
Object Name
Print, Photographic
Print Size
3.5 x 5.75 inches
Object ID
HC-79-02-53
Images
Less detail
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Object ID
P.2000.039.001
Date Range
1854
  1 image  
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Description
Dressing table w/ mirror has Sheraton and Empire features, is made of solid mahogany and veneers with secondary woods of poplar and pine. This is a rare form.
Top has veneered half-column mirror frame supported by turned stiles which are set into top with a double tenon set at a backward cant. Mirror corners are blocks with turned bulls-eyes. Inner cove-molded fillet has vestiges of gilding.
Oblong table top comprised of solid 3/8" thick mahogany laminated onto 1/2" thick poplar, and secured to carcase with screws. A rounded molding is applied to front and ends.
Veneered carcase contains five dovetailed drawers faced with mahogany veneers: one long flanked by two short, over two long. The top drawers have a rounded profile while the two bottom drawers are cockbeaded. All drawers have replacement pulls of hollow, rounded brass knobs with a pierced floliate design. The two bottom drawers are fitted with locks; keyholes have brass insets but dark ghosting indicates missing escutcheons.
Baluster-turned legs extend from table top to floor. They support a low shelf 11 1/2" from floor. Shelf is shaped with recessed cutouts at front and ends.
Inscription: Interior of top central drawer has "J.F. MARKLEY/ CABINET MAKER/ Locust St./ COLUMBIA." stamped within an oval laurel wreath.
Also in collections is a J. F. Markley Empire chest of drawers (P77.02).
Provenance
Provenance: This dressing table was previously owned by an acquaintance of John J. Snyder, Michael Stinchcomb of ???, who recently changed his mind about using this piece in his bathroom when he realized the veneers would suffer. He consequently consigned it to sale at Pook and Pook.
Date Range
1854
Year Range From
1800
Year Range To
1854
Creator
Markley, Jacob Fry, 1800-1854
Storage Location
Wheatland, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
Southwest Bedchamber
Storage Wall
Southeast Wall
Subcategory
Furniture
Object Name
Table, Dressing
Material
Wood, Glass, Brass
Height (in)
65
Length (in)
21.25
Width (in)
40
Condition
Good
Condition Date
2016-04-15
Condition Notes
Cracking in veneer on mirror. Numerous spots of corrosion on mirror. Moderate cracking in veneer on front and sides. Minor chips and scratches overall. Top has two cracks, one is 2" long at left and one is 6 1/2" long at right side. Bottom shelf has 6 1/2" crack at right side. Nails have been added to secure top to carcase; back of top is not secure due to stripped screws. Top left drawer has significant wood removed with rasp at front of sides.
Object ID
P.2000.039.001
Place of Origin
Columbia
Role
Cabinetmaker
Credit
Heritage Center Collection
Accession Number
P.2000.039
Images
Less detail
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Title
Modeling Tool Used by Lloyd Mifflin
Object ID
G.95.08.1
  1 image  
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Title
Modeling Tool Used by Lloyd Mifflin
Description
Copper sculpting/modeling tool hand fashioned to create a flattened, spoon-like handle leading to a rounded shank ending in another flattened end bent at the tip to create a short 1/2" extension bent to nearly a right angle for working in clay or plaster. End is squared off. Crude but effective tool for sculpting bears marks of hammering, especially underside of flattened handle. Used by Lloyd Mifflin. Tool presumed to have been fashioned by Lloyd Mifflin himself from a length of copper. Provenance: Mifflin to the Minnich sisters to the groundskeeper at Norwood to donors.
Norwood Estate, Columbia, PA
Year Range From
1865
Year Range To
1920
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
DAC
Storage Wall
West Wall
Storage Cabinet
Unit 37
Storage Shelf
Shelf 1
Subcategory
Glass, Plastics, Clayworking T&E
Object Name
Tool, Modeling
Material
Copper
Length (in)
6
Width (in)
0.5
Dimension Details
width at handle
Condition
Good
Condition Notes
Hammer marks on tool, especially on underside of flattened handle.
Object ID
G.95.08.1
Place of Origin
Columbia
Usage
Mifflin, Lloyd
Credit
Heritage Center Collection, LancasterHistory.org
Accession Number
G.95.8.1
Images
Less detail

7 records – page 1 of 1.