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2023.708.2, Walking Stick
Carved Walking Stick
2023.708.2, Walking Stick

Carved Walking Stick

Date1884
Maker b. 1812
MediumMaple
DimensionsOverall: 35 1/2in. (90.2cm)
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number2023.708.2
DescriptionElaborately carved walking stick with a handle in the form of a pipe with eagle and “E PLURIBUS UNUM” on the bowl. The shaft is craved with various scenes including a preacher, angel, lion and lamb. Psalm 116:7 and the Lord’s Prayer twist along the spril-carved section.Label TextAlanson Porter Dean was born in New Ashford, Massachusetts in 1812 to Isaac Dean and his wife, Rachel Staples Dean. Alanson and his twin brother, Horatio Nelson Dean, learned the tanning business from their father and both worked as tanners throughout their lives. Alanson also worked as a farmer and he is listed as such in several census records. In 1836, Alanson married Caroline M. Dean and in the 1860s the couple relocated to Chancellor, Virginia. By 1872, the Deans had moved back to New York, settling in Oswego.

Dean was an amateur carver and produce several examples of intricately carved walking sticks that survive. The canes always have "A.P. Dean" carved on them as a signature as well as the recipient's name. This cane is one of the more intricate examples and includes the artist's full name "Alanson P. Dean" without a seperate recipient name suggesting that this piece was carved for the artist to use himself.



Provenance1888, from the maker to his wife, Caroline M. Dean [1818-1902] (Owego, New York); 1902 by inheritence to her daughter, Lydia Dean Carlson [1860-1945] (Owego, New York); 1945 by inheritence to her son Clarence Carlson [1883-1951] (Owego, New York); 1951 by inheritence to his son, Eugene Smith Carlson [1925-2002] (Ohio), 2002 by inheritence to his son, Eugene Smith Carlson Jr. [1961-2022] (Chardon, Ohio); 2022 by inheritence to Private Collection; 2023 sold to The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
2023.708.1, Walking Stick
Alanson Porter Dean
1875
2002.708.3, Walking Stick
Thomas Jefferson Craddock
1870-1900
Walking Stick 2016.708.1
Robert Maxwell Foster
late 19th - early 20th century
No image number on slide
Zachariah S. Robinson (1806-1873)
1838
No image number on slide
Thomas Purkins (1791-1855)
1847
Pipe Bowl 2017.708.1
John Oakford
1862-1863
No image number on slide
Thomas Purkins (1791-1855)
1846
2025.708.1, Frame
Thomas Jefferson Craddock
January 4, 1899