Shaker museum logo on a white background.

Shaker Museum

Box, Storage

Oval box painted green and labeled "D. M.", Mount Lebanon, NY

Object ID:
2018.36.2a,b
Community:
New York, Mount Lebanon
Description

Oval box painted green. Box and lid followers of maple, and headers of white pine. Exterior, including base, painted deep green. Two swallowtails on the box, and one on the lid. A small section of the lid has been lost, near the edge of the swallowtail, probably having been broken off by someone trying to remove the lid. Copper tacks and points. Labeled "D. M." in pale yellow or off-white paint on the lid.

Notes

The pattern of nails in a line along the bases of the swallowtails is a characteristic of Canterbury, NH oval boxes, as is the appearance of the copper points being filed. However, several features are characteristics of Mount Lebanon oval boxes including the use of maple for the lid and box followers instead of birch, the use of copper points instead of iron to attach the followers to the headers, and the application of nails from the inside of the box to the outside at the edge of the follower. If indeed the box was made at Mount Lebanon, the most obvious candidate for the initials "D.M." might be David Meacham, Jr., who was a Church Family deacon from 1815-1821 and an elder from 1821-1844, and who also worked as a box maker. Other possibilities include his father, David Meacham, Sr. (1743-1826), who was a deacon for the Church Family; and Elder Daniel Moseley (1760-1852), who was an elder for the East Family from 1792-1800, was in Ohio from 1805-1812, and then lived the rest of his life at the Center Family.

New York Mount Lebanon

New York Mount Lebanon

Do you have information you'd like to share?

CONTACT US

Shaker Museum updates records with information as it becomes available.

Copyright of this artwork Citation rules

Citation rules

Shaker Museum Box, Storage. https://shakermuseum.us/object/?id=23822. Accessed on April 29, 2024

EXHIBITIONS

Hold for permanent exhibition (permanent installation )

VISIT THE SHOW

EXHIBITIONS

Inscribed (temporary exhibition)

VISIT THE SHOW

We are dedicated to making the cultural heritage of the Shakers available to the public for free.

DONATE
A black and white photo of a person smiling.

Shane Rothe

Curatorial Associate

Shane Rothe (they/them) joined Shaker Museum in July 2023, working with independent curator Maggie Taft on an exhibition for the new museum space in Chatham. Shane is an artist as well as a curator and continues to create in the mediums of painting, sculpture, writing, and performance. Shane holds a BFA from CalArts and an MA in art history and curatorial studies from the University of Chicago.