Overview
The visual evidence strongly supports the seller's description of a Jacobean Revival piece. The stout, bulbous turned balusters and the deep carving on the chest panel (foliate scrolls and a central pinwheel rosette) are hallmark characteristics of this style, which was highly popular in mass-produced American and English furniture during the 1920s and 1930s. The wood grain is consistent with oak, the traditional material for this style.
Story
Jacobean Revival furniture became highly popular in the United States and England during the 1920s and 1930s. Mass-produced by numerous Grand Rapids and regional manufacturers, these pieces romanticized 17th-century English designs with heavy oak construction, bulbous turnings, and ornate foliate carvings. Without a maker's mark, this piece is attributed to the general wave of high-quality, factory-made revival furniture of that era.
Maker / Origin
Unattributed
Condition & Value
Based on the single provided photo, the table appears structurally intact with its original dark oak finish. The deep carvings on the chest panel remain crisp, and the bulbous balusters show no obvious splits.