Jonathan Gostelowe

Serpentine chest of drawers (ca. 1781-93), signed by Gostelowe, Cliveden House, Germantown, Philadelphia.

Jonathan Gostelowe (1744 or 1745, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania - 1795, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) was an 18th-century American cabinetmaker, best remembered for his Philadelphia Chippendale-style furniture.[1]

Biography

He was the eldest of the four children of George Gostelow (1701-1758), a Swedish-American farmer, and his English-born wife Lydia, who lived in the Passyunk section of what is now South Philadelphia.[2] There is no documentation of where the son learned his trade, although, based on stylistic similarities, it is conjectured that he apprenticed under cabinetmaker George Claypoole, Sr.[3] For much of his career, Gostelowe operated a shop on Church Alley between Second and Third Streets in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[4]

He married Mary Duffield at Christ Church, Philadelphia on June 16, 1768. She died on May 13, 1770 at age 26, and was buried in Christ Church Burial Ground.[5]

He served in the 4th Artillery Regiment of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War, attaining the rank of major.[6] He was paid for supplying drums to the army, possibly items he made himself. In August 1778, he completed an inventory of all arms and materiel held by the Continental Army in southeastern Pennsylvania. This inventory included illustrations of thirteen standards (regimental flags), which may have represented each of the thirteen Pennsylvania Militia regiments.[7] Design of these flags is attributed to John Henderson.[8] One "Gostelowe List" standard survives in the collection of the Smithsonian Institution.[9]

Painter (and fellow veteran) Charles Willson Peale organized the Grand Federal Procession, an elaborate parade on July 4, 1788 celebrating ratification of the United States Constitution by ten of the former Thirteen Colonies (surpassing the required three-quarters majority). Gostelowe helped to recruit its 5,000 participants, and rode on the float sponsored by his guild, "The Gentlemen Cabinet and Chair Makers of Philadelphia."[10]

He was a contemporary of Philadelphia cabinetmakers Thomas Affleck, Benjamin Randolph and William Savery. Thomas Jones (fl. 1773-1802), of London, served a four-year apprenticeship under Gostelowe beginning in October 1773, and may have kept the shop going during Gostelowe's military service.[11]

He attended Christ Church, Philadelphia, and created some of its fixtures. He became a vestryman in 1792.

He married Elizabeth Towers on April 19, 1789.[12] As a wedding gift, he made her a serpentine chest of drawers and matching dressing table mirror incorporating their initials and the year "1789." The chest of drawers and mirror are now in the Mabel Brady Garvan Collection at Yale University Art Gallery. Gostelowe and his former-apprentice, Thomas Jones, are closely associated with the serpentine chest of drawers form, which was relatively rare in America.[13]

In 1790 he moved his shop to his wife's property at 66-68 High (now Market) Street, where he worked until his retirement in 1793.[14]

Gostelowe died on February 5, 1795, and was buried in Christ Church Burial Ground.[15] In 1798 his widow married Congressman Matthew Locke of North Carolina.[16]

Examples of his work

Notes

  1. Modern replica of Gostelowe chest of drawers from Kindel Furniture.
  2. George Gostelowe from Ancestry.com
  3. Andrew Brunk, "The Claypoole Family Joiners of Philadelphia: Their Legacy and the Context of Their Work," American Furniture (Hanover, NH: University Press of New England for the Chipstone Foundation, 2002), pp. 166-69.
  4. Bjerkoe, p. 115.
  5. Mary Duffield Gostelowe from Find-A-Grave.
  6. "Philadelphia City Muster Rolls, Philadelphia Artillery, 1783-1790," Pennsylvania Archives 3:6.
  7. Official Flag of the 11th Pennsylvania Regiment
  8. John Henderson Papers, Smithsonian Institution.
  9. A 3-flag set of standards from a Virginia regiment and a standard from Connecticut were captured by British Lt. Col. Banastre Tarleton, and survive. The Connecticut standard resembles one illustrated in the "Gostelowe List."
  10. Charles Willson Peale, "Account of the Grand Federal Procession in Philadelphia," The American Museum, volume 4, (Philadelphia: Mathew Carey, 1788), page 62.
  11. John J. Snyder, Philadelphia Furniture and Its Makers (New York: Main Street Universe Books, 1924), p. 48.
  12. Marriage records from Christ Church, Philadelphia.
  13. Deborah Anne Federhen, "The Serpentine-Front Chests of Drawers of Jonathan Gostelowe and Thomas Jones," The Magazine Antiques (May 1988), pp. 1174-83.
  14. Bjerkoe, p. 115.
  15. Burial records from Christ Church, Philadelphia.
  16. Marriage records from Christ Church, Philadelphia.
  17. St. Paul's baptismal font
  18. Gostelowe-attributed chest of drawers from Winterthur Museum.
  19. Gostelowe chest of drawers from Cliveden.
  20. Gostelowe-attributed mirror from Philadelphia Museum of Art.
  21. "Jonathan Gostelowe," from Philadelphia Antiques Week 2012.
  22. Communion table from Christ Church, Philadelphia.
  23. Baptismal Font from Christ Church, Philadelphia.
  24. Wedding chest of drawers from Yale University Art Gallery.
  25. Dressing table mirror from Yale University Art Gallery.
  26. David L. Barquist, American Tables and Looking Glasses in the Mabel Brady Garvan and Other Collections at Yale University (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1992), pp. 358-362, cat. no. 207.

References

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