Exploring the critical role of enslaved and free Black craftsmen in Charleston’s cabinetmaking industry during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, this article argues that South Carolina’s elite planter class, driven by wealth accumulated through a plantation economy based on slavery, created a demand for fashionable furnishings that Charleston’s craftsmen met through the exploitation of enslaved and free Black labor. Using Thomas Elfe’s account books and other archival sources, the author demonstrates how enslaved artisans were integral to the production, repair, and sale of furniture. Despite governmental attempts to regulate the hiring and training of enslaved workers, Charleston’s cabinetmakers continued to rely heavily on their labor because of economic incentives. The author concludes that understanding the full impact of Charleston’s eighteenth-century furniture industry requires acknowledging the contributions of African and African American craftspeople and unskilled laborers. This perspective challenges traditional narratives and encourages museum professionals to interpret decorative arts not just as objects of beauty but also as artifacts that reveal the many hands and lives behind their craftsmanship and how they were shaped by systemic exploitation.
William A Strollo (Mon,) studied this question.