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The Property of the Boswell Family, Washington, DC:WILLIAM AND MARY OAK DRESSING TABLE, circa 17

Currency:USD Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:NA Estimated At:800.00 - 1,200.00 USD
The Property of the Boswell Family, Washington, DC:WILLIAM AND MARY OAK DRESSING TABLE, circa 17
The Property of the Boswell Family, Washington, DC:WILLIAM AND MARY OAK DRESSING TABLE, circa 1700. The rectangular top with molded edge above a frieze with applied beaded molding and single long drawer over a carved, shaped apron on cabriole legs ending in trifid feet, now fitted with a marble top, (old repairs, losses) - 26 in high x 40 1/2 in wide x 22 3/4 in deep. PROVENANCE: This dressing table is said to have descended in the family of Lord Thomas Fairfax, 1693-1781. Fairfax inherited territory between the Potomac and Rappahannock Rivers, amounting toan area of more than 5 million acres. Though born in England, Lord Fairfax immigrated to this country in 1747, and lived in the Shenandoah Valley in a hunting lodge called Greenway Court. The dressing table descended through his family for generations to sisters Lillian Fairfax and Gwendoline Fairfax Moncure, and stood in their home at 235 2nd Street, S.E., Washington, D.C., until their deaths in the 1940's. The house and its contents, including the table, was acquired by Mary Fineran. The Boswell's acquired the table from Miss Fineran in the 1950's. The Fairfax sisters are included in "Places and Persons on Capitol Hill," (1960), a booklet published by the Capitol Hill South East Citizens Association.