Desk

From collection Furniture

Desk

An important document and a rare signed example of Long Island furniture, this desk was made by Thomas Cooper, the brother of carpenter-joiner Caleb Cooper of Southampton. A prospect door on the interior is playfully fashioned as a face with two paper “eyes” under glass. Copper signed his name and the date of August 1770 in the area surrounding the pupil of the eye on the right. The eye on the left is inscribed “Thomas Helme Esquire.” The inlaid initials on the lid are for the patron, Thomas Helme (1728–1818) of Miller Place. Helme was a prominent member of the community, holding several public offices and serving as secretary of the committee of safety during the American Revolution. Thomas Cooper apparently moved to Miller Place in the late 1760s. According to local tradition, he died there in 1774 following an injury sustained from a fall during the construction of a barn.

 

Details

Desk
Walnut 
43.75 x 40 x 19.5 in.
Fall-front walnut desk with thumb-molded slant lid, cleats joined to center panel with half-blind dovetails, outer face inlaid with the initials “TH” enclosing a compartmented interior comprised of eight valanced pigeon holes over a double bank of eight drawers with brass pulls, centers on a prospect door with applied decoration in the form of a stylized face; turned half-pin element fixed to the center of the head, two oval “eyes” frame glass covering two paper labels bearing the inscriptions “Thomas Helms, Esquire” and “Thomas Cooper August ye 1770”; case sides joined to top with half-blind dovetails, four thumb-molded and graduated drawers with brass escutcheons rest on drawers blades with exposed dovetails, full-sized lopers on either side of the top drawer with brass pulls; case rests on incised molded bracket feet joined with half-blind dovetails, supported by secondary glue blocks.
Labeled: "Thomas Helms, Esquire" "Thomas Cooper August ye 1770"
Originally owned by Thomas Helme (1728-1818) of Miller Place, NY
1986.45
Preservation Long Island purchase