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Doorway from the Elihu White House

about 1762
Object Place: Hatfield, Massachusetts

Medium/Technique Painted pine
Dimensions Overall: 360 x 237.5 x 48.3 cm (141 3/4 x 93 1/2 x 19 in.) Width is taken at the middle.
Credit Line Gift of Wallace Nutting
Accession Number16.246
CollectionsAmericas
ClassificationsArchitectural elements
This imposing doorway was originally the front entrance of the Elihu White house in Hatfield, a small town north of Springfield, Massachusetts. Its vine-carved pilasters — with tulips and rosettes in the pilaster caps — and its pediment with large scrolls terminating in rosettes are characteristic of the exuberant architectural carving found on the doorways of mid-eighteenth century houses in the Connecticut River Valley. Similar carving is also found on furniture from the area.

ProvenanceMade as the front door of the Lieut. Elihu White house, built around 1762, in Hatfield, Massachusetts, also known as the Eben White Tavern in the early nineteenth century. Purchased of Daniel White Wells through Wallace Nutting, Framingham, Massachusetts, for $200 (plus $26.40 charges), from General Funds, June 8, 1916.