Dining table, gateleg
Date1715-1730
Attributed to
Gaines family
MediumWalnut and white pine
DimensionsOH: 27 5/8"; OW: 40 1/2"; D(closed): 14 3/8"; D(open): 41 3/8"
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1959-392
DescriptionDining table: top round when open; consists of 3 solid walnut boards; thumb-molded; slightly beveled circumference. Center board pinned to frame underneath. Long drawer at one end; molded straight apron; 8 block, vase, and ring-turned legs, 4 of which comprise the gate at either side which swings out to support leaves. Stretchers between legs also block, vase, and ring-turned; legs end in Spanish feet.Label TextThe form of this table, which includes turned gatelegs, drop leaves, and Spanish feet, was found throughout the colonies. When not in use, the leaves could be folded down against the legs and the table stored against the wall. Differences in the design of the turned legs or the use of local secondary woods help attribute these tables to specific regions or shops. Similar turned legs have been found on tables with New England origins, specifically those produced by members of the Gaines family of turners who worked in Ipswich, Massachusetts, and Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in the early to mid-eighteenth century. White pine often appears as a secondary wood in New England furniture.
1690-1730
1695-1725
1725-1750
1700-1730
1715-1740
ca. 1770
Ca. 1725
1805-1820
1750-1790
1700-1730
1650-1700
ca. 1765