Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts [serial] 23, 2 (1997)

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120-21.
68. While tew inventories were recorded specifically as being prepared room by room, in some instances the wa)'s in which furniture was listed make apparent the room in which an ob- ject was kept. The inventor)' of the property of Elizabeth Harding records, "four feather beds and bedsteads, nine sheets, three yarn Cover lids, four yarn quilts, four Callico Do., five blan- kets, four Cotton Counterpins, three pillows, tour straw beds, one walnut dining table, one square do., one square a
...sh do., one sugar chest, one beau fat. "(Davidson County [Tennessee] Wills and Inventories, August 1816, Book 7, pp. 57-58.) The inventory ot the propert)' ot John Ghotson lists "i folding table, i cupboard, i sugar chest, 7 chairs." (Williamson County [Ten- nessee] Wills and Inventories, October 1817, Book 2, p. 334.) 69. Williams listed his primary occupation as farmer in both the 1850 and the 1870 U. S.
Census; however, the inventory of his estate contained the accoutrements of a cabinetmaker, including a workbench, a turning larhe, and tools.


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