Chapter 2 of 7 · 658 words · ~3 min read

CHAPTER II

Cedar Chests

The chest, or coffer, has had a varied existence. Its present popularity was preceded by a period in which new chests were a rarity. Previous to this time—taking us back to our great-grandmothers’ days—the chest, in the form of the “dower chest,” was the proud possession of every girl with vision. Why its popularity suffered is hard to surmise, unless it was relegated as being “old-fashioned,” and, therefore, obsolete. In recent years those in society who make things fashionable have restored it to its place of usefulness and beauty, and today there are very few girls whose possessions do not include a chest.

OLD ITALIAN CHESTS

Long before the era of convenient furniture, chests, or coffers, were the one article of utility in every home. In them was kept clothing, valuables of every description, and even food-stuffs.

In early days, these chests were crude, ugly affairs, made for utility alone. Later, especially in Italy, they developed into articles of beauty.

This development reached its height at the time of the Renaissance when the greatest artists of the day took up the decorating of them. Carving and painting, furnished to the wealthy at great expense, produced articles whose magnificence is astounding. These beautiful chests were usually presented to Italian “brides-to-be,” who kept their dowry of rich velvets, magnificent brocade, and other treasures of maidenhood safely under their covers.

With the ever-changing ideas of humanity, the beautiful chest lost its popularity, and some wonderful specimens of Renaissance artistry were relegated to the scrap heap. A few were saved—perhaps for the associations they suggested—eventually to be prized and handed down from generation to generation, preserved in the national museums, or homes where wealth permits the collection of old furniture.

NEW ENGLAND CHESTS

In quaint old New England, the seventeenth century bride considered her future happiness to depend largely upon the contents of her “dower chest.” Every maid had one—sometimes more than one—in which she assiduously collected her trousseau—her beautiful handmade linens, her gorgeous silks and satins, preparatory to the day of her ascension into home-making.

Nothing, perhaps, in her interesting life could she recall, in later days, as vividly as her old dower chest, and nothing, perhaps, did she prize as highly.

In those days few chests were made of cedar—oak being the wood preferred. Using the chests, as did the old-time bride, merely to assemble her trousseau, its storage properties were not considered as they are today.

PRESENT DAY DEVELOPMENT

Why the chest lost its popularity is hard to determine. It may be that moths, developing in the oak chest and devouring its contents, were a determining factor, or it may be simply a passing whim of society that relegated the chest. When red cedar came into favor as the universal chest material, repelling moths and other insects, and permitting of most beautiful finishes, the chest returned to its own.

The present-day mother—the far-sighted mother—is instilling the dower chest notion into the hearts of her children as did her great-grandmother years ago. It is not a sentimental whim which prompts her to do this, it is strictly a utilitarian one.

Girls, the majority at least, will some day marry. If they have a chest they will sew and save to fill it, if not, they may come to the altar unprepared, or purchase at one time those things that their own labor and years of association should endear to them. Even if they never marry, bachelor girls must clothe themselves, and some even fit up small apartments in which to live, hence this saving will not be a loss.

Cedar chests may be purchased ready made, of course, but their rather high price prohibits their possession by some. Manual training students or home craftsmen will find in the chest a most attractive project of construction, and one made by a boy as a present to an older sister will give the chest, in her sight, an added charm.