New Victor School Desk

Discussion in 'Furniture' started by Trevor Harvey, Dec 3, 2018.

  1. Trevor Harvey

    Trevor Harvey New Member

    Interested if anyone on this forum has any information on New Victor school desks. Interested in the company itself and trying to determine the year of one of the desks I am currently refinishing. Interesting to me is that my current desk does not have an inkwell that is commonly seen. It has ornate cast iron legs and simply reads New Victor on the legs. No model, no other detail. Any information that anyone on here can provide is appreciated.
     
    i need help likes this.
  2. gregsglass

    gregsglass Well-Known Member

    Hi,
    I remember that our desks had added a pencil slot at the top before the ink wells disappeared. I grew up in the early 1940s.
    greg
     
    i need help and judy like this.
  3. Trevor Harvey

    Trevor Harvey New Member

    Greg
    Interesting. Yes, My desk only has the pencil holder and no inkwell. Appreciate the input!
     
    i need help likes this.
  4. judy

    judy Well-Known Member

    Hi Trevor!

    Welcome to Antiquers!

    Can you show us some photos?
     
    i need help likes this.
  5. Trevor Harvey

    Trevor Harvey New Member

    Hi Judy. I will work to get some found. I am having a hard time finding these exact pictures right now. I will post when I come across them.
     
  6. judy

    judy Well-Known Member

    Great!

    We'll look forward to seeing them.
     
    i need help likes this.
  7. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    photo the desk yer working on.........
     
    i need help likes this.
  8. judy

    judy Well-Known Member

    :)
     
    i need help likes this.
  9. Trevor Harvey

    Trevor Harvey New Member

  10. Trevor Harvey

    Trevor Harvey New Member

  11. verybrad

    verybrad Well-Known Member

    Can't tell you anything specifically about the company but can tell you the basic design is late Victorian. This would put the design circa 1890 and likely produced for decades. By 1930, this design would have begun to have been phased out, though the form persisted. The lack of an inkwell on yours would indicate that the top was probably changed at some point or was a very late production model. Desks like this were used by school systems well beyond their production years. An elementary school I attended in 1965 still had them in regular use.
     
    judy and i need help like this.
  12. Trevor Harvey

    Trevor Harvey New Member

    Thank you. That helps dial in the range a little better.
     
    i need help likes this.
  13. Fid

    Fid Well-Known Member

    what - please - does the last row of pupils do ? sitting on the floor ? pressing their lower backbones to the wall ?
     
    i need help and SBSVC like this.
  14. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Moderator Moderator

    Communal bench bolted to the wall.
     
    i need help and Fid like this.
  15. SBSVC

    SBSVC Well-Known Member

    In the book "blurb" I posted on Trevor's other thread about this desk -
    https://www.antiquers.com/threads/new-victor-school-desk-company-info-history.33193/#post-439430 -
    there was a notation of "7 No. 4 Rears" sold to a school @ $2.25/ea, along with 42 No. 4 desks @ $2.55/ea. It sounds as if they wanted 7 rows of 6 desks and had to buy the "rears" for the desks across the back:

    img0 (153).jpg
    img0 (154).jpg
     
    Bakersgma and i need help like this.
Draft saved Draft deleted
Similar Threads: Victor School
Forum Title Date
Furniture New Victor School Desk Company Info/History Dec 15, 2018
Furniture Victorian carved wood set - gone in 60 seconds Aug 11, 2024
Furniture Teacup Curio Victorian? Whale End? Reproduction? May 1, 2024
Furniture How old is this Victorian looking washstand Feb 3, 2024
Furniture Victorian sofa Jan 24, 2024

Share This Page