Skip header and navigation

Revise Search

6 records – page 1 of 1.

Collection
Wheatland
Object ID
W.45.7
Date Range
1830s
Collection
Wheatland
Description
Mahogany chest of drawers. Three drawers which are width of chest and vary in depth. Two smaller drawers at top. Pillars on either side American
Provenance
James Buchanan- General & Mrs. Logan [friends of Buchanan and purchased chest at Buchanan estate sale]- Elizabeth Logan Payne [inherited chest from Logans]
Date Range
1830s
Last Owner
Buchanan, James
Storage Location
Wheatland, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
Middle Attic
Storage Wall
Room 1
Subcategory
Furniture
Object Name
Chest of Drawers
Material
Mahogany
Height (in)
45.375
Width (in)
44.812
Depth (in)
22.062
Condition
Good
Condition Date
2003-10-21
Object ID
W.45.7
Notes
Information found in 'Restoration Committee Report 5/1/1957- 'Possibly an acquisition from Elizabeth Logan Payne-had belonged to Buchanan-Payne inherited the dresser from Gen. & Mrs. Logan who were friends of Buchanan in Washington.
Accession Number
W.45.7
Less detail
Collection
Decorative Arts Collection: Textiles
Object ID
2007.009
Date Range
1838
  1 image  
Collection
Decorative Arts Collection: Textiles
Description
Jacquard coverlet made by Samuel Hippert. Weft yarns are red, green and blue wool and warp is natural white cotton. Two loom widths sewn together in center.
Center field has circles of foliate motifs. Border includes a double row of 8-petal flowers. At foot end and sides is an inner borders of roosters.
Weaver's blocks in corners at foot: "S+ H+ ELI/ ZABETH/ TOWN/ PA 1858/ SARAH/ ANN/ FLURY". Band with "H PATENT" repeated along runs across coverlet between weaver's blocks.
Sides are self-fringes; foot edge finished with applied fringe. Top/head edge has red cotton tape handsewn over the raw edge.
.
Corner blocks have "S.H. ELIZABETHTOWN PA 1838 SARAH ANN FLURY". Hippert worked in Mount Joy ca. 1833-1838 and in Elizabethtown ca. 1835-1841.
Date Range
1838
Made By
Hippert, Samuel
Last Owner
Flury, Sarah Ann
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
DAC
Storage Wall
Island 5
Storage Cabinet
Unit 39
Storage Shelf
Shelf 2
Storage Container
Box 0139
People
Hibbert, Samuel
Flury, Sarah Ann
Subcategory
Need to Classify
Subject
Elizabethtown (Pa.)
Search Terms
Coverlets
Elizabethtown
Jacquard weaving
Object Name
Coverlet
Material
Cotton, Wool
Length (cm)
242.57
Length (ft)
7.9583333333
Length (in)
95.5
Width (in)
84
Dimension Details
Width: 76 inches + 4-inch fringes on both sides = 84 inches wide
Length: 91.5 inches to 4-inch fringe = 95.5 inches long
Condition
Good
Condition Date
2020-03-12
Condition Notes
Fringe wear/loss on both sides near head of coverlet; some staining; tape along top edge is loose in a few places.
Object ID
2007.009
Notes
Updated By CMR On 5/23/2016
Weaver Samuel Hippert is cited in:
1. Heisey, John W., compiler. "A Checklist of American Coverlet Weavers." Wmsburg, VA: The Colonial Wmsbrg. Foundation, 1978. pp 70-1.
2. Anderson, Clarita. "American Coverlets and Their Weavers." Wmsburg, VA, 2002. p. 173.
Place of Origin
Elizabethtown
Accession Number
2007.009
Images
Less detail
Collection
Fine Arts Collection: Paintings
Title
Henry Clay, Lavallyn Barry, and Robert Lindsay Eichholtz
Object ID
2002.063.2
Date Range
1835-1845
  1 image  
Collection
Fine Arts Collection: Paintings
Title
Henry Clay, Lavallyn Barry, and Robert Lindsay Eichholtz
Description
Handwritten label attached to top of stretcher:
Three sons of Jacob Eichholtz, artist
Left to right Born
Henry Clay Eichholtz - Aug. 28th, 1830
Lavallyn Barry " - Sept. 13th, 1835
Robert Lindsay " - April 1st, 1833
Handwritten label attached to bottom of stretcher:
Varnished Mar. 27-1924 with
"Webers Picture Mastic Varnish"
Date Range
1835-1845
Year Range From
1835
Year Range To
1845
Creator
Eichholtz, Jacob
Painted By
Eichholtz
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
DAC
Storage Wall
Art Rack
Storage Cabinet
North Side
Storage Shelf
Rack 5
Storage Drawer
Front
Subcategory
Art
Subject of Painting
Henry Clay, Lavallyn Barry, and Robert Lindsay Eichholtz
Object Name
Painting
Oither Names
Portrait
Medium
Painting, Oil
Height (in)
15.375
Width (in)
22.688
Dimension Details
Frame measurements: Height = 20 inches
Width = 27.75"
Depth = 2.375"
Condition Notes
Painting:
Painting conservation needs:
Frame:
Frame conservation needs:
Object ID
2002.063.2
Notes
Note from previous exhibit:
Oil on Canvas; ca. 1838
Portrait of three sons of Jacob Eichholtz, Henry Clay Eichholtz, Lavallyn Barry Eichholtz, and Robert Lindsay Eichholtz.
Jacob Eichholtz and his second wife, Catherine Trissler Eichholtz, named their three youngest children after prominent Kentucky senator and former secretary of state Henry Clay; Baltimore banker Lavallyn Barry; and beloved son-in-law and Philadelphia bookseller Robert Lindsay.
The father of 13 children, Eichholtz portrayed his three youngest with an immediacy and grace that rivals his finest work. Captured just four years prior to the artist's death, these angelic faces are rendered through the eyes of a father's's love and affection. - Thomas Ryan, President and CEO of LancasterHistory.org
Accession Number
2002.063
Other Number
Painting #173
Images
Less detail
Collection
Fine Arts Collection: Paintings
Title
Julie Schultz and Father
Object ID
1939.002.1
Date Range
1828-1850
  1 image  
Collection
Fine Arts Collection: Paintings
Title
Julie Schultz and Father
Description
Watercolor of young girl and father.
On reverse is attached note, "To make sure that the old portrait of Julie Shultz and her father, who has her by the hand shall go into permanent possession of Lancaster County Historical Society
Miss Ella B. Hart who lived with her niece Mary Agnes Schultz when she died at 9 or 11 Shippen Street in 1911 gave it to me with that understanding (gave in the fall of 1935)
Julie was sister of Alexander Shultz who was a tinsmith in Strasburg. He built the house now owned by Robert E. Groh on site of birthplace of Thomas Burroughs.
This shall stand even if unwitnessed,"
Date Range
1828-1850
Year Range From
1828
Year Range To
1850
Creator
Maentel, Jacob
Painted By
Att. Jacob Maentel
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
DAC
Storage Wall
Island 5
Storage Cabinet
Unit 42
Storage Shelf
Shelf 2
Storage Drawer
Bin 2-F
People
Schultz, Julie
Maentel, Jacob
Subcategory
Art
Subject of Painting
Julie Schultz and Father
Object Name
Painting
Material
Paper
Medium
Painting, Watercolor
Height (in)
14
Width (in)
10
Object ID
1939.002.1
Notes
Framed: Ht: 16.5
W: 12.25
D: 1.00
Role
Artist
Accession Number
1939.002
Images
Less detail
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Object ID
G.86.05
Date Range
1830-1860
  1 image  
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Description
Pieced quilt of silks, cotton batting, glazed cotton back, cut in 2 halves, made by Quaker Deborah Simmons Coates, wife of Lindley Coates (1794-1856). Has 19 horizontal bands of dress silks (many produced by Harmonist Community) in alternating triangles arranged in Birds in the Air or Flying Geese pattern using the template method. Large triangles of varying patterns alternate with large triangles with 3 smaller appliqued triangles of contrasting patterns. Colors are browns, tans, beiges, electric and royal blue, peach and green. Each quilt half has a green silk binding on the three outside edges, and tan silk on the inner vertical cut edge. Quilting patterns are clamshell, diamond, cross in a square and diagonals.
At quilt center is a cream-colored triangle with an abolitionist stamp depicting a kneeling enslaved Black male in chains over the words: "Deliver me from the oppression/ of man." This stamped triangle was cut in two when quilt was divided; image now hidden by modern binding. According to Cuesta Benberry research, this image of a kneeling enslaved person originated with the English ceramic firm of Wedgwood in the late 1700s. See items 08.242 and 42.76.11 in the collectiosn of Metropolitan Museum of Art for seals with a similar motif. The Wedgwood family were ardent abolitionists, decorating various ceramics with this image, resulting in its rapid adoption by American anti-slavery groups. Used in many forms and media over the years, it remains the logo of the still-existing Pennsylvania Abolition Society and appears on organization's official publications.
Lindley and Deborah Coates, of West Grove, Chester Co., married there on 12/16/1819 but lived near Christiana in Sadsbury Twp., Lancaster Co. They attended Sadsbury Friends Meeting House near Christiana. Ardent abolitionists, their home was what is now designated station #5 on the Underground Railway. Lindley became President of the American Anti-Slavery Society in 1840, before William Lloyd Garrison. Deborah Coates became a Hicksite Quaker minister according to historian Beverly Wilson Palmer. Hicksites were the more radical Quakers, named after leader Elias Hicks.
Provenance
Quilt passed to son Simmons (1821-1862) & wife Emeline Jackson. (Deborah Coates lived w/ widow Emeline on her Chester Co. farm (Evergreen Hall in West Grove) for many years following Simmon's 1862 death. See census records). Descent to their daughter Elizabeth Jackson Coates who married Marriott Brosius, U.S. congressman from Lancaster. The quilt was then divided between their two daughters, donor's maternal grandmother Graceanna Brosius Biddle and her sister Gertrude Coho Reinhartson. The two halves were then reunited when given to donor, Marjorie Ayars Laidman. Deborah S. Coates was donor's great great great grandmother.
Date Range
1830-1860
Year Range From
1830
Year Range To
1860
Made By
Coates, Deborah Simmons, 1801-1888
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
DAC
Storage Wall
West Wall
Storage Cabinet
Unit 32
People
Coates, Deborah T. Simmons
Coates, Lindley
Subcategory
Bedding
Subject
Abolitionists
African Americans--History
Quilts
Slavery
Slavery--Pennsylvania
Search Terms
Abolitionists
Quilts
Slavery
Object Name
Quilt
Material
Cotton, Silk
Height (in)
89
Width (in)
96.5
Condition
Good
Condition Date
2016-05-02
Condition Notes
Overall good condition. Two halves of quilt (with recent inside binding on cut edges) are "mounted" on cotton muslin, side-by-side. Silks show significant deterioration -- cracking, splitting and abrasion -- with some losses. Binding also has deterioration with some losses. (See 1985-86 condition report by conservator Linnea Davis.)
Documented in Quilt Harvest #448-B (records in Archives).
Object ID
G.86.05
Place of Origin
Sadsbury Twp.
Credit
Gift of Marjorie A. Laidman, Heritage Center Collection
Accession Number
G.86.05
Images
Less detail
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Title
Cup
Object ID
G.98.51.32a-b
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Title
Cup
Description
Cup (A) and saucer (B), glazed soft-paste porcelain, Strawberry pattern. Handleless cup has straight flaring sides & rests on a small foot Paint decoration on white ground has 2 strawberries & a large green leaf on each side with smaller leaves, purple roses and brown squiggles. Interior has double stripe with berries and flowers. Rim painted rust.
Saucer (B)
Provenance
Collected by Harpo and Susan Marx during visits back East from CA. Donated to Heritage Center.
Year Range From
1800
Year Range To
1850
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
DAC
Storage Wall
West Wall
Storage Cabinet
Unit 32
Storage Shelf
Shelf 3
Subcategory
Food Service T&E
Object Name
Set, Cup and Saucer
Material
Clay, Glaze, Paint
Height (in)
2.5
Diameter (in)
3.75
Object ID
G.98.51.32a-b
Place of Origin
England
Credit
Given in memory of Harpo by Susan Marx, Heritage Center Collection
Accession Number
G.98.51
Less detail

6 records – page 1 of 1.