Just as a turkey dinner depends largely
for its success upon the “fixin’s,”
so the fireplace is in itself incomplete without its
andirons and tools. To begin with the most nearly
indispensable appurtenances, we must name the andirons or,
if the fuel is to be coal, then the basket grate.
I have wondered sometimes why the philosophers have
not hit upon the andiron as a particularly fitting
subject for pleasurable rumination. There are
so few things which combine to such a degree the purely
utilitarian with the eminently decorative qualities.
Most things which do combine the two in any real measure
have been developed on the side of one at the expense
of the other quality. Take man’s dress coat,
for example, the cut-away front of which, with the
two buttons at the back, was designed to permit the
gentleman to loop the skirts up to his waist when
he mounted his horse. Or, take the modern lighting
fixture with its little pan still waiting to catch
the drip of the tallow beneath the flame, which has
long since been displaced by gas tip or incandescent
filament. How few things there are, after all,
which ages ago probably through a long
evolution were designed to meet a real
need in the best possible manner and which still meet
that need and combine true beauty with their usefulness.
The wrought-iron shoe of a horse occurs to us, perhaps
a ship’s anchor, a string-bow or an axe helve.
Some support is needed to raise the
fuel so that the air may find a clear passage under
and through it to the flames, and nothing could well
be devised to serve the purpose better than the pair
of horizontal wrought bars, each with its single rear
foot and its steadying front, the upper continuation
of which serves to hold the burning logs in place.
One is not likely to go wrong in making
a choice of andirons for any given type of fireplace.
The simply turned brass patterns belong so obviously
to the Colonial brick opening with its surrounding
white woodwork; the rougher wrought-iron types are
so evidently at home in the craftsman fireplace or
the rough opening of stonework, that misfits are hardly
possible.
Fortunately the old brass andirons
of Colonial days have proven themselves fitted to
survive, and many of them are still to be found in
old cobwebby attics or in the more accessible shop
of the dealer in antiques. One of these confided
to me his way of distinguishing the really old andirons
from artificially aged reproductions: the old
ones have the turned brass of the front post held
in place by a wrought-iron bar that attaches to the
horizontal member by a screw thread on the bar itself;
on the modern examples this upright bar is drilled
with a threaded hole into which an ordinary short
screw engages through a hole in the horizontal member.
Next after the andirons in importance
are the tools the three most nearly essential
ones being the poker, tongs and shovel. There
is no need of saying that these should harmonize with
the andirons and preferably be of brass if they are
of brass; wrought iron if the andirons are of wrought
iron. There are two ways of taking care of them the
ordinary method of using a stand which, if the tools
are bought together, will probably come with them;
or in some of the fireplace types where the whole
chimney breast is of brick, concrete or stone, sometimes
a combination of three or more hooks is wrought in
the same metal as the tools and fixed securely in
the chimney breast at the side of the opening.
A brush for the hearth, although not
so frequently seen, is exceedingly useful in sweeping
back the ashes and small embers. Then there is
the time-honored bellows, now hardly more than an
ornament, for with a scientifically built fireplace
it should never need to be called into action.
A screen of some sort comes nearer
to being classed with the necessities than with the
merely decorative accessories, for it is hardly safe
to leave a fire or even the smoldering embers without
some protection against the damage that is so quickly
caused by sparks. The usual type of screen is
the woven wire one in several forms. Probably
the most convenient type is that made up of a number
of flat sections which fold upon one another into
a compact mass which will not be in the way when not
in use. In recent years, however, there is another
sort of screen that is coming to be regarded with
very high favor and that is the screen made up of
glass in combination with other materials. There
is the simple French screen of glass panes in a gilded
frame, and there are wonderful possibilities for the
employment of the craftsman’s skill in combining
with plain or lightly tinted glass more decorative
features in the way of stained glass and leading or
in the combination of glass and metals.
The design of a fire screen depends,
of course, on the purpose it is intended to serve.
If it is desired to secure a screen that will cut off
the heat but not the light of the fire, the craftsman
will work with larger areas of clear glass. On
the other hand, it may be felt desirable to make a
nearly opaque screen to cut off both light and heat.
These, of course, are usually small rectangles on
some sort of a pedestal and are not intended to take
the place of spark screens.
A wood receptacle of some form is
a convenient accessory, as one will avoid the task
of carrying fuel up from the cellar or in from the
woodpile whenever a fire is desired. There is
a broad field from which to choose brass-bound
boxes of many sizes and forms, sturdy baskets and
the metal wood baskets which are made for holding the
logs themselves. There are those who prefer not
to encumber the vicinity of the fireplace with these
rather bulky receptacles, but who find it convenient
to have a box built in near by in the form of a window-seat
or perhaps as a part of built-in bookcases. Two
or three houses that I have known had a very simple
rough dumbwaiter running from the cellar up into a
window-seat. This could be loaded with fuel, hoisted
into position and locked there until the fuel was
needed.
There are two other fireplace accessories
that we must not overlook, and these are the crane
and the trivet. The crane is a very picturesque
feature in a fireplace that is large enough to hold
it comfortably, but it does seem unfortunate that
in a great many fireplaces the crane is dragged in
with the idea of making it a decorative feature but
without any expectation of putting it to practical
use. There are fireplaces in a summer
camp, for example where a crane could be
put to good use. Used elsewhere it is too often
merely an affectation.
The trivet is not nearly so well known
as the crane and yet it might be put to use in a modern
fireplace much more frequently. In England it
is found in various ingenious forms, most of which
show, however, some form of low stool which is stood
upon the hearth, as near as may be convenient to the
fire, to keep warm a teakettle or perhaps even a plate
of toast. There are some rather interesting antique
brass trivets to be found in many of the larger antique
shops.