Label TextScreening, and also cheesecloth, were sometimes used for the panels in food safes rather than punched tin. It is believed that cheesecloth originally covered the openings in this safe; subsequently, wire screen replaced the less durable cloth. There is a hinged door at the back and, if the safe were placed in front of a window or an opening between two rooms, foodstuffs could be reached from either side. The safe was found in Serbin, a Wendish community, and it is unfortunate the ingenious maker's name is not known.
As settlers flocked to Texas during its incarnations as a republic and then a state, the need for furniture grew along with the population. The cost of importing furniture from other parts of the United States or Europe was prohibitive; thus, 19th century Texans often designed and built to suit their own needs, relying especially on the influx of craftsmen from Germany. Although the forms of Texas furniture closely resemble case and seating furniture used elsewhere, they are made of woods native to the state such as pine and walnut, and are embellished with less expensive decorations, such as simpler porcelain pulls for drawers. The objects on view were once owned by Houstonian Faith L. Bybee, a passionate collector of American furniture and decorative arts who embraced the styles of her native state as well as examples of design from the Eastern Seaboard.
(Texas Gallery, 2018)