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1920s Hand Carved Wood Federal Style Mantel with a Dark Mahogany Finish

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  • 1920s Hand Carved Marble Mantel Geometric Floral Details
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    Dating back to the 1920s, this off-white marble mantel showcases elegant gray veining, accompanied by intricate carved geometric patterns interwoven with delicate foliate motifs. The...
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  • Hand Carved Mahogany Double Decker Mantel 4 Griffins
    Located in New York, NY
    Late 1800s American hand carved mahogany mantel. Features over the top details including four separate griffins flanking the two sides with columns. Als...
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  • 1920s Louis XVI Style Mantel Tan Grey Brown White Shades
    Located in New York, NY
    This mantel was recovered from a 1926 well heeled apartment at 950 5th Avenue and East 76th Street on the upper east side of NYC. Hand carved stone featuring various shades of tan, g...
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  • Carved Bolection Style White & Grey Veined Marble Mantel
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    This 20th century Bolection style influenced fireplace mantel consists of three solid blocks of gray veined white marble. Features gentle curves and simple lines. The top of the surr...
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  • French Louis XV Hand Carved Rouge Royal Marble Mantel
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    Late 1800s antique Louis XV period mantle. Hand carved out of rouge royal marble. Features a scrolled fleur di lis design in the apron center. Slightly angled vertical sides. Polishe...
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  • Louis XV Hand Carved French Marble Mantel Rouge Royale
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    Early 20th Century French hand carved mantel made of Rouge Royale marble. Done in a Louis XV style in simple lines. Front undulating serpentine breast shows a sea shell with leaves a...
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  • Federal Style Wood Fireplace Mantel
    Located in Sheffield, MA
    19th Century American white painted fireplace mantle with strong molding and handsome detailing. Dimensions of opening: 32.45" w x 29.13" h
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    Antique Late 19th Century American Federal Fireplaces and Mantels

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  • Antique Federal Style Wooden Fireplace Mantel
    Located in Sheffield, MA
    A handsome example of an unusually large American Federal Period wooden fireplace mantel. The wood does show aged wear. Use it as is for added charact...
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    Antique 19th Century American Federal Fireplaces and Mantels

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  • Fan-Carved Wood Mantel in the Federal Taste
    Located in New York, NY
    New York, Fan-carved mantel in the Federal taste, circa 1812 Pine Measures: 66 1/4 in. high, 90 3/8 in. wide, 13 1/4 in. deep Within the genre of carved rather than plasterwork mantels of the Federal Period, no example that has come to light is more perfectly designed or more carefully wrought than the present one, which is an amazing symphony of fans, urns, beads, and other Neo-Classical devices, all ultimately influenced by the plasterwork designs of the English architects Robert (1728–1792) and James (1732–1794) Adam. Of a type that proliferated in the area bounded by the northern New Jersey counties of Bergen and Passaic, the Hudson Valley, and western Long Island, the mantel is representative of work that flourished in the first couple of decades of the 19th century. While most of the woodwork of this style that has survived is found in interiors, various examples of exterior doors and other trim have been noted, but most examples have disappeared as a result, variously, of natural deterioration and purposeful demolition in anticipation of development. Although considerably larger in scale and more elaborate in ornament than a mantel that has been in the collection of the Brooklyn Museum since 1944 (acc. no. 44.55; photograph in Hirschl & Adler archives), the present mantel is so close in style and conception to that example that it likely originated in the same house. The Brooklyn mantel is documented as having been removed from a house built by Judge Isaac Terhune (1762–1837), an eminent lawyer and judge. The house was situated on King’s Highway, at the corner of Mansfield Place, at the edge of South Greenfield, a village in northern Gravesend, Brooklyn. A photograph of the house, taken by the German e´migre´ photographer, Eugene Armbruster (1865–1933), is in the collection of the New-York Historical Society. Terhune is ultimately descended from the Dutch-Huguenot e´migre´ Albert Albertson Terhunen, who died in Flatlands, Brooklyn, in 1685.The family eventually spread out through New Amsterdam, Long Island, and Bergen County, New Jersey. Terhune’s great-grandson, also Albert (1715–1806), left a sizable estate to his six surviving children, including his second child and second son, Isaac. Judge Terhune lived in the house until his death in 1837, at which time, according to an article in The New York Times for November 27, 1910, he, having died without issue, “left the White Frame Mansion with its exquisitely carved doorway, beautiful mantels, and other interior adornments to his brother John” (Part Six, p. 11). The article continues: After the latter’s death, the house and its estate of about 70 acres passed through several owners, eventually being purchased in 1853 by Benjamin G. Hitchings [1813–1893]. The house next passed to Benjamin’s son, Hector, who had been born in the house, and then lived there for 25 years. He sold it in 1910 in partial payment for a Manhattan apartment house. After thus having been sold to a real estate developer, the Hitchings property was subdivided into Hitchings Homestead. The house survived until about 1928, at which time it was razed and a Deco-style apartment house with the address 2301 Kings Highway was constructed on the site and occupied in 1935. By 1910, the fate of the house, in an area of Brooklyn that was being rapidly developed, was becoming obvious. The Times article reported: The house has been well kept up, but fearing lest the hand of time or vandals might deal harshly with some of its choice bits of carving, Mr. Hitchings removed a few years ago a few beautifully carved wood mantels...
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    Antique 1810s American Neoclassical Fireplaces and Mantels

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  • 1920s Reclaimed Bolection Mantel
    Located in Wormelow, Herefordshire
    An early 20th century English Bolection style fireplace. Salvaged from a property in Surrey. Additional Dimensions: Opening Height 83.5 cm Opening Width 107 cm Width betw...
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  • Carved Mahogany Georgian Style Reclaimed Mantel
    Located in Wormelow, Herefordshire
    A reclaimed early 19th century Georgian style carved Mahogany fireplace. Additional Dimensions: Opening Height 97 cm Opening Width 97 cm Width between outsides of the foo...
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    Antique Early 19th Century Fireplaces and Mantels

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  • Jacobean Style Carved Dark Oak Fire Mantel
    Located in Wormelow, Herefordshire
    A handsome antique Jacobean style carved dark oak fire mantel, dating to circa 1890. This eye-catching fire surround would make an impression in a period property with its dark oak f...
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