Thomas Affleck
Thomas Affleck was an 18th-century American cabinetmaker, who specialized in furniture in the Philadelphia Chippendale style.
Biography
He was born in Aberdeen, Scotland to a devout Quaker family. There is no documentation of where he learned his trade, but, based on stylistic similarities to his later work, it is conjectured that he apprenticed under Edinburgh cabinetmaker Alexander Peter. He moved to London in 1760, and immigrated to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1763. That same year, John Penn, a grandson of Pennsylvania's founder William Penn, arrived in Philadelphia and was sworn in as governor of the Colony. One of Affleck's first major commissions came in 1766 for a substantial set of furniture for Governor John Penn and his bride, Anne Allen, daughter of William Allen, the Colony's richest resident.Affleck's first shop was on Union Street. By 1768 he had moved to Second Street, south of Dock Creek. In 1771 he married Isabella Gordon, and was censured by his fellow Quakers for marrying "out of Meeting." The couple had six children, four of whom survived to adulthood. Isabella died in 1782, and he never remarried.
Another major commission was for furnishing the Second Street city house of John and Elizabeth Cadwalader. For this Affleck was joined by fellow cabinetmaker Benjamin Randolph, and carvers Hercules Courtenay, John Pollard, Nicholas Bernard, and Martin Jugiez. Cadwalader's receipts for the work survive at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, although determining which cabinetmaker made which piece sometimes must be based on attribution.
He participated in 1776 protests against war with Great Britain, but it is unclear whether he was a Loyalist, a pacifist, or both. He was deemed a "dangerous person"—along with a number of his fellow Quakers—in August 1777, and banished to Virginia in October. Seven months later he was allowed to return to Philadelphia. He did not fight in the American Revolutionary War on either side.
Merchant Levi Hollingsworth was a patron and friend of Affleck's. A suite of furniture with identically carved legs - twin high chests, matching twin dressing tables, a set of 8 chairs, twin pie-crust tea tables - descended in the Hollingsworth family. During the war, Affleck sometimes traded furniture to Hollingsworth for materials and other goods. One of the pie-crust tea tables was traded to Hollingsworth for a 7-gallon cask of rum.
He moved his shop to Elmslie's Court in 1791. In 1790 Philadelphia became the temporary national capital for a 10-year period, while Washington, D.C. was under construction. Affleck may have made the chairs in Congress Hall for the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate.
Affleck died in 1795. His eldest son, Lewis, continued as a cabinetmaker.
Examples of his work
- Card table, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
- Side chair, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
- Clothes press, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- Side chair, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
- Side chair, Dayton Art Institute, Dayton, Ohio.
- Marlborough-leg armchair, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- Side chair, Mabel Brady Garvan Collection, Yale University Art Gallery.
- Chest-on-chest, Winterthur Museum, Winterthur, Delaware. Made for Vincent Loockerman of Dover, Delaware.
- Chest-on-chest, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- Side chair, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- Chest-on-chest, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
- Chest-on-chest, attributed to Affleck, Cliveden, Germantown, Philadelphia.
- Marlborough-leg camel-back sofa, Diplomatic Reception Rooms, U.S. Department of State, Washington, D.C.
- Senate armchair, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
- House of Representatives armchair, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Governor John Penn furniture
- Marlborough-leg camel-back sofa, Cliveden, Germantown, Philadelphia. Believed to be part of the furnishings made for Governor John Penn.
- Pair of Marlborough-leg armchairs, Independence Hall, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
- Pair of Marlborough-leg armchairs, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
- Pair of Marlborough-leg armchairs, Diplomatic Reception Rooms, U.S. Department of State, Washington, D.C.
- Pair of Marlborough-leg armchairs, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- Marlborough-leg armchair, Winterthur Museum.
- Marlborough-leg armchair, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
- Marlborough-leg armchair, Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Cadwalader furniture
Made for John and Elizabeth Cadwalader. The furniture consisted of at least thirteen chairs, a pair of serpentine-front sofas, a pair of card tables, an easy chair, and four fire screens.- Hairy-paw-foot side chair, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- Hairy-paw-foot easy chair, Philadelphia Museum of Art. Set a world auction record for a piece of furniture when it was sold at Sotheby's New York in 1987 for $2,750,000. Donated to the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 2002.
- Hairy-paw-foot card table, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
- Hairy-paw-foot card table, Dietrich Americana Foundation, Reading, Pennsylvania.
- Hairy-paw-foot fire screen, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- Hairy-paw-foot fire screen, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
- Hairy-paw-foot fire screen, Winterthur Museum, Winterthur, Delaware.
- Hairy-paw-foot fire screen, private collection.
Levi Hollingsworth furniture
- Twin high chests. One is at the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the other was auctioned at Christie's New York, 16 January 1998; now in a private collection.
- Twin dressing tables. One is at the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the other was auctioned at Christie's New York, 16 January 1998; now in a private collection.
- Camel-back sofa, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
- Set of 8 chairs. One chair is a promised gift to the Philadelphia Museum of Art; another chair was auctioned at Christie's New York, 16 January 1998, now in a private collection; other chairs in private collections.
- Pie-crust tea table, auctioned at Christie's New York, 26 January 1995, realized $398,500; now in a private collection.
- Pie-crust tea table, deaccessioned from Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2012; auctioned at Sotheby's New York, 25 January 2013, realized $146,500; now in a private collection.