David H. Conradsen
The Stock-in-Trade of John Hancock and Company
The firm John Hancock and Company opened "Upholstery Furnishing Rooms"
at the southwest corner of Third and Walnut streets in Philadelphia in May
1830. When the proprietor John Hancock died in 1835, the stock-in-trade
and debts to the estate totaled over S24,000. The probate documents-will,
executor's account, and an extensive shop inventory (see appendix) -which
record the stock, materials, tools, and trade of a large upholstery and
furnishing business of the 1830s, are an invaluable source to both cultural
and decorative arts historians.1
John Hancock (born 1803, Brookline, Mass.) was
one of four ambitious and entrepreneurial brothers who entered the furniture
trade. Two brothers remained in Boston-Henry (born 1788, Roxbury, Mass.),
a chairmaker and cabinetmaker from 1816 to 1851, and William (born 1794,
Roxbury), an upholsterer from 1819 to 1849. A third brother, Belcher (born
1800, Brookline), was an upholsterer and moved with John to Philadelphia
(fig. 1). The
executor's account demonstrates that John Hancock and Company was the
Philadelphia branch of an extensive upholstery and decorating business.
John owned a one-fourth interest in his firm; William probably supplied
the rest of the capital and materials.2
The inventory of the stock-in-trade of John Hancock and Company sheds
light on the size and scope of Hancock's enterprise and the upholstery
trade during the early nineteenth century. The firm produced a variety
of expensive seating and bed and window furniture. By 1835 the stock included
more than 200 chairs and sofas that were retailed directly through the
wareroom. The proportion of unupholstered frames to upholstered chairs
suggests that the firm maintained a smaller number of finished goods and
numerous frames, which were upholstered to order from a variety of fabrics
and trims.
Rocking chairs represented more than half of the stock of seating furniture.
Eighty-six were spring-seat rockers made of mahogany, walnut, or less
expensive woods such as maple, painted to simulate rosewood or curled
maple. The firm also kept in stock 150 inexpensive maple rocking chairs
without upholstery, variously described as "scroll seat"; "nurse"
("high" and "low back," "small," "scroll
seat," "best quality," and "inferior kind");
"[New?] York Pattern"; and "common."
Fifty rosewood-grained rocking chairs outnumbered all other types, and
references in Philadelphia household inventories from 1830 to 1845 attest
to the popularity of these fancy rocking chairs with plush covers. Guillema
Evans, for example, had "one Elastic Spring Seat Rocking Chair covered
with green velvet."3
One surviving "Im[ita]t[ion] Rosewood Rocking Chair" has its
original spring seat and curled hair and tow foundation (figs. 2,
3). The cushion
has five helical iron wire springs that are secured to a plank deck and
twined in place.
Hancock and Company sold Spanish arm and rocking chairs, based on late-eighteenth-century
campeche chairs (fig. 4),
in both black walnut and mahogany and probably finished them in morocco
(a goatskin leather with a grained surface), plush (a woolen velvetlike
fabric, with a long pile), and haircloth (a fabric with a horsehair weft).
Henry C. Carey, who owed Hancock's estate $118 in 1835, had two types
of Spanish chairs in his library and may well have purchased them from
Hancock's firm (figs. 5-7).
Smaller quantities of stylistically innovative or patent furniture were
in stock. Among these were "Groove Arm Chairs" that may have
resembled Louis XV chairs with molded or reeded backs. The "Self-Acting
Chairs," or "London Recumbent Chair," which the firm advertised
in 1833, is illustrated by a reclining chair sold by William Hancock.
The design of this chair, with a sliding footrest beneath the front rail
and a ratchet-and-hinge system that allows the arms to slide and the back
to recline, may have been inspired by London cabinetmaker William Pocock's
design for a "Reclining Patent Chair" published in Rudolf Ackermann's
Repository of Arts in 1813.4
The firm's printed label suggests that "easy chair" referred to any
chair with upholstered arms and back. The inventory included two easy chairs,
fourteen easy chair frames, and a loose cover for an easy chair. The reference
to "Tin Chair Pans" indicates that at least some of Hancock's easy
chairs were fitted as close stools.
Like eighteenth-century upholsterers, Hancock and Company probably made
to order much of its bedding and bed and window hangings. Although the
firm maintained a substantial stock of curtain fabrics, trims, and fixtures,
only five completed sets of bed hangings and a set of window curtains
were in the wareroom. The appraisers found one-half dozen ready-made hair
mattresses, one spring mattress, and twenty-six feather pillows and also
inventoried seventy-nine ticks for beds, bolsters, and pillows, and seventy-nine
yards of ticking. Feathers were processed in a kiln, and four hundred
pounds of feathers were on hand. One "rattan palias" is the
only mattress stuffed with cheap plant fiber; "cane shavings"
were substituted for the more commonly used Spanish moss, cattail, or
chaff.5
In a span of five years, John Hancock, with the financial and material
support of his brothers, built the largest upholstery and decorating firm
in Philadelphia. The company produced a relatively small line of innovative
spring-seated chairs, sofas, and stools, which they finished to suit a
range of customers. In part their success was linked to this flexibility,
to aggressive advertising and marketing, and to the existence of a growing
urban middle class of consumers. The inventory, which catalogues the stock,
tools, and materials used by John Hancock and Company, sheds light on
an important entrepreneurial venture of the 1830s. It is a rich document
that provides a key to further interpretation of this period in American
history.
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