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Home » Authors » David F. Wood

David F. Wood

David F. Wood is Curator of the Concord Museum and has published several books and articles on the Museum’s collections, cabinetmaking, and clock-making in Concord.

Articles

ARTICLES

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Paul Revere’s Iconic American Silver

March 15, 2020
David F. Wood
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The most extensive Federal-era tea service Paul Revere’s shop ever produced is included in the exhibition, Beyond Midnight: Paul Revere and His Ride, at the Concord Museum. Made for John and Mehitable Templeman in 1792, the set includes a teapot, tea caddy, sugar bowl, and cream pot that are fluted in emulation of the fluted columns of classical antiquity. If the style of this tea set summons the ancient past, its manufacture conjures the industrial future.


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Henry David Thoreau’s Green Desk

Excerpt from: An Observant Eye: The Thoreau Collection at the Concord Museum (2006)
June 15, 2019
David F. Wood
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A simple green desk made in Concord, Massachusetts, in about 1838 by a cabinet-maker who charged perhaps one dollar for it, had a career in America’s intellectual history entirely out of proportion to its humble origin, because it was Henry Thoreau’s desk. Since it entered the Concord Museum collection, the desk has become a cornerstone of the Museum and a treasured American icon. 


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Featured Stories

  • COVERDiscoverBattleRoad NPS image no logo.jpg

    Discover the Battle Road

    Remembrance is vital to the history of a nation. From the stone walls of the Battle Road to rediscovering Concord's fallen from the Revolutionary War, this week we bring you two inspiring articles from Discover the Battle Road: "Secrets, Stones, and Soldiers on the Battle Road" and "Restoring Their Legacy: Rediscovering Concord's Fallen from the Revolutionary War".  
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