Jennie Alexander

Jennie Alexander (December 8, 1930 – July 12, 2018) was an American woodworker considered a pioneer in the woodworking world, "Instrumental in designing the now iconic two-slat post-and-rung shaving chair,".[2] She also coined the term "greenwoodworking" as a single word in her book, Make a Chair from a Tree: An Introduction to Working Green Wood. [3]

Jennie Alexander
Born
John David Alexander Jr.[1]

(1930-12-08)December 8, 1930
DiedJuly 12, 2018(2018-07-12) (aged 87)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Maryland
Known forWoodmaker
WebsiteOfficial website

Background

Jennie Alexander was a transgender woman from 2007 onward, born as John David Alexander Jr.[1][4] Alexander spent her early childhood in Baltimore, Maryland learning to play the piano and later became a Jazz musician. She was introduced to woodworking at the Baltimore polytechnic institute High School and would later go on to open up her own home shop in 1960.[5]

Her mother grew up in Quincy, Massachusetts, and was part of the educational sloyd system. Because of this Jennie was always encouraged to explore woodworking and learning through doing.[2] Her father was a lawyer, and Jennie also attended law school at the university of Maryland, becoming a well respected divorce lawyer. She embraced greenwoodworking as an avocation.[2] She both practiced greenwoodworking, and studied the history of greenwoodworking by examining furniture at museums, private collections, auction houses, etc.

Jennie Alexander's wife, Joyce, died in 1996. The couple had three daughters. In 2007, at the age of 77 and after 32 years of Alcoholics Anonymous Jennie transitioned from male to female.[2] Jennie Alexander has five grandchildren and three great-grandchildren; one of whom is John D. Alexander III.[6]

Career

In 1978, Alexander wrote, Make a Chair from a Tree: An Introduction to Working Green Wood, which was the first woodworking book published by Taunton Press. This book describes the process and tools required to construct a shaved two-slat post-and-rung chair without the use of a wood lathe. She became a member of the Early American Industries Association (EAIA) which was a crucial step in her exploration of woodworking and chair making as it gave her access to collections of joined furniture.[2] She also demonstrated how to make the shaved two-slat post-and-rung chair at an event hosted by EAIA. She later taught classes at Drew Langsner's Country Workshops in North Carolina and mentored many students.[2]

At Country Workshops she met Peter Follansbee, and after years of corresponding, would go on to co write a book with him called, Make a Joint Stool from a Tree: An Introduction to 17th-Century Joinery.[5] She spent her later years mentoring many in greenwoodworking techniques and joinery. Jennie died July 12, 2018.[7][8]

Two-slat post-and-rung shaving chair

Jennie Alexander had attributed the success of the post-and-rung shaving chair to her wife, who after Jennie was told she could not wood turn in front of a live audience, encouraged Jennie to make the same chair by shaving all the parts close to round without a lathe. Jennie said, “So the shaving, really, made the existence of the post-and-rung chair a reality in this country.”[2]

From her book, Make a Chair from a Tree: An Introduction to Working Green Wood:

A post and rung chair is a stick chair with a fiber seat. It has cylindrical mortises bored into vertical posts to receive the ends of horizontal rungs. Then the chair is first assembled, the posts contain more moisture than the rungs. The chair is held together by the shrinking of the posts around the dry rungs. It is one of the few things made today that depends on the shrinking actions of wood.[3]

This chair differs in part from the Windsor chair because it does not have a solid carved seat. In a Ladderback Chair, the seat is not structural. Where in a Windsor chair, the seat is structural - all the legs, back and arms terminate in the seat.

Education

  • High School Baltimore City Polytechnic Institute[2]
  • St. John's College[2]
  • University of Maryland[2]

Publications

  • Make a Chair from a Tree: An Introduction to Working Green Wood [3]
  • Make a joint stool from a tree, an introduction to 17th-century joinery (co written with Peter Follansbee) [5]

See also

References

  1. Obituary, May 25, 2017.
  2. Uhl, Kara (May 25, 2017). "Meet the Author: Jennie Alexander". Lost Art Press. Retrieved March 30, 2018.
  3. Alexander, Jennie (1978). Make a chair from a tree : an introduction to working green wood. Newtown, Conn.: Taunton Press. pp. 11. ISBN 0918804019. OCLC 4715888.
  4. "Meet the author: Jennie Alexander", blog.lostartpress.com, May 25, 2017.
  5. Alexander, Jennie; Follansbee, Peter (2012). Make a joint stool from a tree : an introduction to 17th-century joinery. Fort Mitchell, KY: Lost Art Press. p. 115. ISBN 9780985077709. OCLC 796739614.
  6. Kelly, Jacques. "Jennie Alexander, attorney and woodworker, dies". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved 2019-10-10.
  7. "Greenwoodworking". www.greenwoodworking.com. Retrieved 2019-07-23.
  8. "Jennie Alexander, attorney and woodworker, dies". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
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