GUEST
I've been told that this chest is from Fort Harrod, Harrodsburg, Kentucky, and was built by my great-grandfather--seventh or eighth generation, I'm not exactly sure--and he was a furniture maker in Fort Harrod, and he was the husband of Ann Kennedy Poague, who was supposedly the first female settler in Kentucky.
APPRAISER
Kentucky achieved statehood in 1792. Would this have been slightly before or slightly after that period?
GUEST
I was told it was slightly before, but I, but I can't confirm that.
APPRAISER
Yes. There must have been family stories told about this, how it was used in the family?
GUEST
It was used as a sugar chest.
APPRAISER
And open it up to just take a look at the interior of this piece. What you notice here are three compartments, and the one thing we've discovered from inventories of households is that in general, these three sections would hold white cone sugar, brown granulated sugar...
GUEST
Mm-hmm.
APPRAISER
And then unroasted coffee.
GUEST
Okay.
APPRAISER
And these were three of the most expensive condiments in the American home at that time. We forget, with sugar everywhere today, how difficult it was to come by. And that's the reason that we have locks on all of the drawers. One of the responsibilities of a woman in that period was to keep the keys to these kind of locked areas in a key basket or on her chatelaine. Do you know what the wood is?
GUEST
I believe it's cherry.
APPRAISER
Cherry. And the secondary wood is tooled Poplar.
GUEST
Okay, I didn't know that.
APPRAISER
Which is to be expected in this region. You see these shadows here?
GUEST
Yes.
APPRAISER
Yes, those were where the wrought-iron hinges held. And on that side, as you can tell, it ripped out part of the backing. One of the things that's interesting about this piece, I think, is its large size and its construction. You notice it has tapered legs. Some have rounded legs, but the tapered leg is much more a Hepplewhite element. I would tend to think that this is possibly after statehood.
GUEST
Okay.
APPRAISER
Because the Hepplewhite leg does not come in until the 1780s.
GUEST
Okay.
APPRAISER
And by the time it reached here, it was probably a generation or two later. I've talked to some of my colleagues, and it's our general opinion that a conservative retail estimate would be about $8,000 to $10,000.
GUEST
Wow, wow.
APPRAISER
Because there is a great interest in this Southern furniture today.
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