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The ultimate combination of the chiffonier, the wardrobe and the secretary is achieved in this chifforobe/secretary which has a drop-front desk installed on the right side.

Furniture Specific: Family relations

The ultimate combination of the chiffonier, the wardrobe and the secretary is achieved in this chifforobe/secretary which has a drop-front desk installed on the right side.
The ultimate combination of the chiffonier, the wardrobe and the secretary is achieved in this chifforobe/secretary which has a drop-front desk installed on the right side.

While we tend to think of furniture at the least as just inanimate objects or as functional art at best, we have to admit that as forms evolve they do have a tendency to create related families. One unique creation inspires the creation of another similar and related but still somehow different form. Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? Especially if you have children. In this edition of Furniture Specific I will take a look at some of the related family members of different groups, looking at similarities and differences.

CHEST OF DRAWERS

The chest of drawers began merely as a box with a lid, a chest if you will, sitting on the floor, a convenient place to stash most of a family’s belongings and small enough to be moved quickly when the need arose. That was an admirable attribute in the unsettled Middle Ages. As times settled down so did the populace and mobility was not quite as necessary as before. Convenience came to play a role in household furnishings and one box that held everything was not exactly the height of modern convenience, especially when you had to unload the entire chest to find the item on the bottom. In the 17th century a new invention called the drawer added a new dimension to the chest providing a specialized compartment for storage of important or frequently used items.

Drawer technology rapidly improved and the addition of drawers to the family chest abounded, as additions to either the top or bottom of a chest. Eventually the top of the chest disappeared and what was left was a standing chest of drawers.

One style chest popular in the time of Louis XVI was the semainier, a tall chest with seven drawers, one for a person’s linen and clothing for each day of the week. Such tall slender chests were also called a chiffonier and that opened up an entire new family of chests.

One of the more useful offspring of the chiffonier was developed late in the 19th century. It was a large standing chest with a tall slender storage space on one side fitted with hardware for hanging clothes and concealed by a full-length door, often mirrored. On the other side of the cabinet was a vertical stack of drawers, perhaps with a mirror above. This uniquely American concoction combined the attributes of the chest of drawers, the chiffonier, with the convenience of the freestanding closet, the wardrobe. The combined piece was called a combination of the two words that came out as chifforobe.

During the Depression era of the late 1920s and 1930s, another relative of the chest evolved. It was designed as part of a bedroom suite for use specifically by men. This cabinet had long drawers below with smaller drawers above, crowned by a section with doors. The doors opened to reveal a series of open sliding drawers for storage of folded shirts and stiff collars. This arrangement with the doors on top was called a chifforette.

SECRETARY

Another family line of furniture that has come a long way is that of the secretary, a form that began as simply a place to transcribe the written word. In ancient Egypt and China it was simply a box that contained simple writing tools and a medium that could easily could be stored and moved as the source of the spoken word moved. In the Middle Ages the boxes were called scriptorium and the slanted tops were hinged for quick access to materials. Then the box was eventually placed on a table and you know what happened next. Like Topsy in Uncle Tom’s Cabin, it “just growed.”

A drawer was added here and another there and before long what had been a box on a table became a desk on a frame that supported a network of drawers. By then portability was no longer an issue and like the chest of drawers, convenience became primary and what could be more convenient than having reference books at our fingertips? With a shelf added above the desk for books the new from was called the secretary, a word derived from the Latin scriptorium and scrutoire.

Eventually the word secretary came to be used to describe any closed desk with or without bookshelves and with or without drawers below the main desk. An early example was the 16th century Spanish vargueno, a portable chest-type desk on a stand, usually with no drawers and no bookshelves. In the early 18th century the secretary settled pretty much into the familiar form of the slant-front desk, either as a complete cabinet or as a desk on frame. But about the same time a new version was being developed that had a complete cabinet-type bookcase with doors on top of the basic secretary. This form was the bookcase/secretary that is still in vogue today in so many styles from so many periods.

But the idea of a closed desk was so attractive that it was bound to morph into other forms and one 19th century form cleverly combined the chest of drawers with the closed desk. It appeared to be simply a chest but the top drawer was in fact a drop-front desk hidden behind the drawer facade that folded down. Then the desk unit pulled out halfway to provide writing room. This version of the secretary became popularly known as the butler desk, since the height of the desk surface when extracted from the cabinet did not require the butler to sit to use the desk unit.

This variation was very much in keeping with the popular idea that a secretary drawer could be installed almost anywhere. That led to the clever concealment of secretary units in almost anything that had a top drawer including the often massive breakfront, producing the breakfront/secretary.

Before the turn of the 20th century another member joined the bookcase secretary. This new upstart had the nerve to place the bookcase on the ground attached to the desk unit rather than above it. Revolutionary! Now the user of the desk didn’t even have to arise from his seat to get a reference book. It was right there at eye level or below.

And finally, to complete the circle came the unit that combined the chiffonier, the wardrobe and the secretary, the chifferobe/secretary, a unit often found in Depression era bedroom furnishings that had a drop-front desk, similar to a secretaire abattant, installed in the drawer section.

 

Send your comments, questions and pictures to Fred Taylor at P.O. Box 215, Crystal River, FL 34423 or email them to him at info@furnituredetective.com.

Visit Fred’s website at www.furnituredetective.com. His book How To Be a Furniture Detective is available for $18.95 plus $3 shipping. Send check or money order for $21.95 to Fred Taylor, P.O. Box 215, Crystal Fiver, FL, 34423.

Fred and Gail Taylor’s DVD, Identification of Older & Antique Furniture ($17 + $3 S&H) is also available at the same address. For more information call 800-387-6377, fax 352-563-2916, or info@furnituredetective.com. All items are also available directly from his website.


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


The ultimate combination of the chiffonier, the wardrobe and the secretary is achieved in this chifforobe/secretary which has a drop-front desk installed on the right side.
The ultimate combination of the chiffonier, the wardrobe and the secretary is achieved in this chifforobe/secretary which has a drop-front desk installed on the right side.
A descendant of the simple chest, this slender chest of drawers was called a chiffonier in France.
A descendant of the simple chest, this slender chest of drawers was called a chiffonier in France.
The combination of a chiffonier with an armoire or wardrobe resulted in a new form called the chifforobe.
The combination of a chiffonier with an armoire or wardrobe resulted in a new form called the chifforobe.
A final step in the evolution of the chiffonier was the chifforette with the placement of the doors on top of a chest that opened to reveal sliding trays similar those of a linen press.
A final step in the evolution of the chiffonier was the chifforette with the placement of the doors on top of a chest that opened to reveal sliding trays similar those of a linen press.
After a long and tedious journey, the original scribe’s box became the slant-front secretary.
After a long and tedious journey, the original scribe’s box became the slant-front secretary.
By adding storage for books above the desk, the bookcase/secretary was created.
By adding storage for books above the desk, the bookcase/secretary was created.
A later variation of the bookcase/secretary was the placement of the bookcase alongside the desk resulting in the side-by-side bookcase/secretary.
A later variation of the bookcase/secretary was the placement of the bookcase alongside the desk resulting in the side-by-side bookcase/secretary.
The idea of a secretarial space with a fitted interior was so appealing it wound up in lots of places like the top drawer of a breakfront.
The idea of a secretarial space with a fitted interior was so appealing it wound up in lots of places like the top drawer of a breakfront.
In this case the secretarial space was placed in the top drawer of chest creating the butler’s desk.
In this case the secretarial space was placed in the top drawer of chest creating the butler’s desk.