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Historic Rooms
Early
Carolina Rooms
Among other historic settings in the North Carolina Collection Gallery
are the Early Carolina Rooms. The largest of these rooms features furniture
from the late colonial and early federal periods and has walls lined with
paneling that was crafted in the mid-1700s from a house in Pasquotank
County, N.C. Many years ago this wide, yellow-pine paneling was removed
from that location, stored for a time, and then transported to Chapel
Hill for installation in Wilson Library in the early 1950s.
Most of the Early Carolina
Rooms' furniture dates from the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries
and represents styles imported either from England, produced by American
manufacturers in the north, or fashioned by local craftsmen in the Albemarle
region of North Carolina and southeastern Virginia. Overall, the main
room's decor does not intend to represent a typical settler's home of
this period. Few citizens in the 1700s and the early 1800s could afford
such finely crafted interiors. At that time it would have been far more
common to find a Carolinian or Virginian living in a small clapboard structure
or in a log cabin with mud-chinked walls, dirt floors, and with few, if
any, windows.
Furnishings in the Early Carolina Rooms include pieces ranging from a
refined Hepplewhite card table (ca. 1810) and a cellarette to a walnut
tavern table and more roughly finished chairs. On display, too, are framed
ornithological prints and maps from the period. Adjacent to a large fireplace
are old cooking utensils, devices for spinning and measuring home-spun
yarns, and other implements that were commonly found in homes two centuries
ago. These items are often used in discussions about home industry in
guided tours for visiting elementary and middle-school students.
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