I was watching an old PBS special about the Civil War in the United States. They covered the shooting of Abraham Lincoln by John Wilkes Booth at the theater, showing old photos and the present day historic site. Also they described what happened after the President was shot, saying that they took him across the street from the theater and placed him in a randomly chosen boarding house room on the first floor. They laid him out on the bed diagonally because he was too tall for the small bed. There he lay being attended to by doctors who had none of today's technology to really give him any hope of survival.
They didn't ask permission of the man who had rented the room and since he was gone at the time, I am sure he was surprised to find the government officials had taken over his room when he returned to the room. From my memory of things Abraham Lincoln didn't die from his wounds until a day later.
The thing that jumped out at me was the chair that was sitting in the boarding house on the right side of the bed. It had a caned seat. I own a chair like that one in the photo, at least I thought so.
It is the same style of chair in shape. This chair did have a cane seat in it originally and it is the same shape. I looked at other views of the chair in other pictures and it is from the same family of chairs but it is not the exact same kind of chair.
Here is the major difference, the only difference to the chair. The back of the boarding house chair was not as fancy as this. It had a plan top, rectangular and straight across the top. The carving was too fancy probably for a boarding house. I have seen chairs like that at antique stores. They were used as everyday dining or kitchen chairs. The wood isn't a really fancy hardwood but it is a sturdy everyday chair.
I bought my chair at an auction in Sidney, Iowa. The woman who had passed away had an antique business in Omaha and a lot of things she kept at her house were antique. I doubt this was a family piece but I suppose it could have been. The cross stitch piece really does look great on this chair even though it is covering up the cane seat opening.
I paid six dollars for it which was a high price for my teacher salary at the time in 1974. I also bought some Wedgewood pieces at that sale for three or four dollars a piece. The auctioneer was not much with selling all the small items so he let me bid the per item bid and then said I could take as many as I wanted. There was an ashtray that I didn't take at the time but someone else certain grabbed it.
Just for fun I am showing you an artist rendition of what he thought it might have looked like while Mr. Lincoln lay dying. The artist has taken artistic license on the looks of the chair in the illustration. I assume the artist would not think that people could someday get on the internet and view that actual chair.
I did a double use for this blog this day as I needed one for my Sepia Saturday site so I used this on there also. I am a social studies teacher today with high school and one middle school class.
Thanks for stopping by my blog.
3 comments:
Quite a fascinating account. I wish the B/W photo was a little clearer, but I guess the fact that a photo of that vintage has survived at all is quite amazing.
Your chair is a beaut.
Grade 6 today.
Amazing! $6.00 is unbelievable too. Bet its worth a whole lot more now.
lovely chair..and the history that goes with it of a very similar chair... Thanks Larry:)
Post a Comment