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Pair of andirons

about 1700
Object Place: Saunderstown, Rhode Island

Medium/Technique Wrought iron
Dimensions 41.59 x 17.78 x 44.45 cm (16 3/8 x 7 x 17 1/2 in.)
Credit Line Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rodman Robinson III
Accession Number1979.379a-b
CollectionsAmericas
ClassificationsTools and equipmentHousehold
Slavery is usually associated with the southern colonies, but early New England had many slaves as well. These andirons descended in the family of Rowland Robinson, who owned a plantation in Saunderstown, Rhode Island, on Narragansett Bay. According to family tradition, these andirons were made by a slave who had been trained as a blacksmith. Both functional and sculptural, the andirons represent the vast body of American art made by slaves, whose names and histories are not well documented.

ProvenanceDescended in the family of Rowland Robinson (died 1713), a plantation owner of Sanderstown, Rhode Island; according to family tradition, made by a Robinson family slave; 1979, gift of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rodman Robinson III to the MFA.