The Law Bay Reredos (made of walnut) was carved by a Mr. Pelligrini from the firm of Irving & Cason of Boston.
Irving & Casson (1875 1974) was a firm of interior designers and furniture makers. Its specialty was interior woodwork and mantels. It made its furniture in the styles of the 17th and 18th centuries. Circa 1914, the firm merged with A.H. Davenport, a furniture company also located in Cambridge MA, which was then a haven for upscale furniture makers and woodworkers. Afterwards, the company executed a number of commissions for Gothic Revival churches, including the chapels at Duke University and the University of Pittsburgh.Irving & Casson worked for much of for America's gilded age wealthy including the John Sprunt, Hill House, and Greystone Mansion ( interior and original furniture) in Durham, NC, and the James Hill House in Minnesota (extensive hand and machine carved woodwork, mosaic wall panels, marble facings and hearths, and custom furniture). In New York, they carved the reredos for St. James Church on Madison Avenue. In Massachusetts they made a rood screen for All Saints in Worcester. The company's last major design commission was for the interiors of the United Nations buildings in New York City, executed in the 1950s. Irving and Casson A.H. Davenport went out of business in 1974.
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