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Louisiana paintings by German-born Franz “François” Fleischbein (1801-1868)

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Franz “François” Fleischbein (German-born, American pairnter 1801-1868) Betsy 1837 New Orleans


François Fleischbein (1804–1868) was a German painter who lived and worked in New Orleans.  Better known as François in the U.S., Franz was born in Godramstein, Bavaria. Although often confused with a naïve artist, he was academically trained, having studied with Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson (1767-1824) at the École des beaux-arts in Paris. In 1833, Fleischbein immigrated to New Orleans with his wife, Marie Louise Tetu (1802-1895), and four children. He remained in Louisiana until his death. Jean Joseph Vaudechamp (1790 - 1866) first encouraged Fleischbein to visit.  Although born Franz Joseph, Fleischbein decided to change his name to François in order to fit with his Creole clients of Gallic descent.

Fleischbein style fused French neoclassicism with German Biedermeier emphasis on pattern. As result, his paintings appear mannered, with schematic drawing, suppressed transitions of light and shade, and odd anatomical distortions. Patrons appreciated his paintings, and Fleischbein advertized that the "greatest correctness of drawing and painting is guaranteed, as well as the likeness of Portraits."  His paintings show a French academic style as well as a sweetness and charm common to 19th Century German painting. With the invention of the daguerreotype in 1839, Fleischbein also worked as an early photographer, an enterprise in which his wife took part.


Franz “François” Fleischbein (German-born, American pairnter 1801-1868) Children of Comte Amedee de Barjac 1839


Franz “François” Fleischbein (German-born, American pairnter 1801-1868) Free Woman of Color


Franz “François” Fleischbein (German-born, American pairnter 1801-1868) Portrait of Marie Louis Tetu 1833-36


Franz “François” Fleischbein (German-born, American pairnter 1801-1868) William B. Schmidt


Franz “François” Fleischbein (German-born, American pairnter 1801-1868) Rosalie Jonas


Franz “François” Fleischbein (German-born, American pairnter 1801-1868) William Schmidt, son of Peter Schmidt


19C American Life - Law & Order

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State: North Carolina Year: 1804

Location: Mecklenburg Location Type: County

Abstract: Cassandra Alexander Houston seeks a divorce from her husband James Houston. The couple married 4 January 1803 and lived together until 28 November of the same year when Cassandra left him "owing (as she verily believes) to her Husbands imbecillity or impotency as a man in procreating his species." Depositions from the petitioner's relatives and others state that they suspected from observing him "make water" that James Houston was not a man like other men; that he had expressed anxiety that "he was not as complete as to genitals as other men;" and that he had on several occasions attempted to "ride" other men and "act with [other men] as man would with a Woman." Marshal Alexander, Cassandra's brother, stated in a deposition that he was once the object of such attempts and noticed at the time that Houston had no testicles. With the marriage unconsummated, the evidence suggesting that Houston "had not the genitals for propagation," and the Alexander's believing that Houston married solely to obtain property, Cassandra Alexander asks to retain her property and be granted a divorce.

You may contact the county to request the full record of this legal action.

The Digital Library on American Slavery, website University of North Carolina at Greensboro

A Few Quirky, Folky Portraits of Early 19th-Century American Women

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attributed to Emily Eastman (Loudon, New Hampshire, 1804-? ) Woman in Veil c 1825


Several New England artists shared a unique painting style during the 1820s-30s. Women depicted by these artists exhibit several similar characteristics - pale, sculptural faces; prominent thin, delicately arched eyebrows; small bowed mouths; & elaborate classical Greek hairstyles of tight curls intertwined with jewelry, flowers, & other adornments.  The paintings are usually watercolors.  The artists paint strong features, sharply defined, with arched, curved eyebrows.  The watercolors are similar to fashion plates appearing in magazines such as Ackerman’s Repository of Arts, Literature, Commerce, Manufactures, Fashions & Politics, published in London in 1809 through 1829.

Emily Eastman was one of these painters who was also from New Hampshire.  Between about 1820 & 1830, Eastman completed several portraits of women, drawn in graphite and then completed in watercolors, in high fashion dress with tightly curled hair. An issue of the contemporary The Lady’s Magazine, described popular fashion of the period,  “Our fair females are covered with transparent shawls, which float and flutter over their shoulders and upon their bosoms, which are seen through them. With gauze veils, which conceal half of the face to pique our curiosity.” A likeness of a young girl is also included here.


attributed to Emily Eastman (Loudon, New Hampshire, 1804-? ) Lady's Coiffure with Flowers and Jewels


Eastman reportedly was born in Loudon, New Hampshire, 75 miles northwest of Boston, Massachusetts. She married Dr. Daniel Baker in 1824.


attributed to Emily Eastman (Loudon, New Hampshire, 1804-? ) Feathers and Pearls


Eastman rarely signed her paintings, but those that are unsigned display similarities such as prominent thin, delicately arched eyebrows; small bowed mouths; & elaborate coiffures of tight curls intertwined with jewelry, flowers, & other adornments.


attributed to Emily Eastman (Loudon, New Hampshire, 1804-? ) Girl Bedecked with Flowers


attributed to Emily Eastman (Loudon, New Hampshire, 1804-? ) Attributed to Eastman - Woman Holding a Bible


attributed to Emily Eastman (Loudon, New Hampshire, 1804-? ) Lady's Coiffure with Spray of Wheat and Wild Flowers


attributed to Emily Eastman (Loudon, New Hampshire, 1804-? ) Young Woman with Flowers in Her Hair c 1820-30

attributed to Emily Eastman (Loudon, New Hampshire, 1804-? )  Young Lady in a Gold Colored gown, her hair dressed with flowers and pearls c 1820


attributed to Emily Eastman (Loudon, New Hampshire, 1804-? ) Girl in Blue Dress


attributed to Emily Eastman (Loudon, New Hampshire, 1804- )


Maine Artist A. Ellis, Lady with a Nosegay 1830


Maine Artist A. Ellis, Diantha Atwood Gordon 1832


attributed to John Usher Parsons (American artist, 1806-1874) Woman in Pink c 1835-38  


Parsons received his early education at Latin schools in Parsonsfield, Maine, where he was born, and in nearby Effingham, New Hampshire.  Parsons graduated from Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine. He was ordained in New York City in 1831, & became a preacher traveling to Indiana, Wisconsin, & Kansas. A dozen or so paintings by Parsons date to the period just after his return to the East Coast. Most are of subjects who lived in the area around Parsonsfield & in New Bedford, Massachusetts, where Parsons was minister for several years. The works appear to have been executed during a four-year span from 1834 to 1838.


attributed to John Usher Parsons (American artist, 1806-1874) Porcupina Van Allen


Unknown Vermont Artist. Woman in a Rose Dress c 1805-1815


Almira Wheaton (American, 1804-1881)  Lady in a Straw Hat 1824-1825


I can only find 2 paintings by Almira Wheaton Saben, who appears in the 1860 US census, she was then living in Winchester, Cheshire County, New Hampshire. She was born September 9, 1804 in Vermont. Her father was Reuben Wheaton. She married Mowry Saben (1801-1880) on February 5, 1835, in Winchester, Cheshire County, New Hampshire. She died there on May 11, 1881. She had 6 children between 1835 and 1844. All of them died by 1845. After that she had 2 children, Levi born in 1844-1912, and Mary born in 1847-1926. Son Levi married Mary A Tolman on January 1, 1869. They had a son Alfred Levi Saben in December of 1869-1930, a son Delano Mowry Saben in 1879-1947, & a daughter Laura Emma in 1882-1964.


Almira Wheaton (American artist, 1804-1881)  Possibly painted as an assignment for a drawing class. Each on paper, 22 1/4 x 18 1/2 and 23 x 18 inches, sight. The first with label on reverse inscribed "Painted or drawn/ by Almira Wheaton Saben/ my great grandmother."


See: Ralph and Susanne Katz, "In Search of John Usher Parsons," Folk Art 30 (Spring 2005): 46-53.

19C American Life - Law & Order

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State: Florida Year: 1843

Abstract: In 1808, John C. Mangham married Ann McKenzie in Glynn County, Georgia. His wife left him in 1827 "with the pretext" of suing for divorce and recovery "of certain property, then in the possession of your petitioner." Still married in 1831, Mangham gave his wife all his slaves by a deed of trust during her life, hoping this would resolve their difficulties. Shortly after receiving the slaves, however, Ann Mangham moved with the slaves to the Florida Territory to live with her daughter and son-in-law. Mangham wrote letters asking her to "return home," but she refused. He seeks a divorce.


You may contact the state to request the full record of legal actions.

The Digital Library on American Slavery, website University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Turbans, Voodoo, & Tignon Laws in Louisiana

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During the 19th century, Marie Leveau (d. 1881), a devoted Catholic known as the Voodoo Queen, was generally a feared figure in New Orleans. Though apparently adept with Voodoo charms & potions of all kinds, Marie's real power came from her extensive network of spies & informants. The New Orleans elite had the careless habit of detailing their most confidential affairs to their slaves & servants, who then often reported to Marie out of respect & fear. As a result, Marie appeared to have an almost amazing knowledge of the workings of political & social power in New Orleans, which she used to build her power as a voodoo priestess.

In the above portrait of Marie Laveaux of New Orleans, Marie was depicted wearing a tignon. A tignon is a series of headscarves or a large piece of material tied or wrapped around the head to form a kind of turban resembling a West African gélé.

A New Orleans journalist reported on a "voodoo rite" that he witnessed in 1828. "Some sixty people were assembled, each wearing a white bandana carefully knotted around the head..." At a given moment in the ceremony, one of the women "tore the white hand- kerchief from her forehead. This was a signal, for the whole assembly sprang forward and entered the dance"

The tignon was the mandatory headwear for Creole women in Louisiana during the Spanish colonial period, and the style was adopted throughout the Caribbean island communities as well. This headdress was required by Louisiana laws in 1785. Called the tignon laws, they prescribed appropriate public dress for females of color in colonial society, where some women of color & some white women tried to outdo each other in beauty, dress, ostentation and manners.

In an effort to maintain class distinctions in his Spanish colony at the beginning of his term, Governor Esteban Rodriguez Miró (1785 - 1791) decreed that women of color, slave or free, should cover their heads with a knotted headdress and refrain from "excessive attention to dress." In 1786, while Louisiana was a Spanish colony, the governor forbade: "females of color ... to wear plumes or jewelry"; this law specifically required "their hair bound in a kerchief."  But the women, who were targets of this decree, were inventive & imaginative with years of practice. They decorated their mandated tignons, made of the finest textiles, with jewels, ribbons, & feathers to once again outshine their white counterparts.


Anthony Meucci (fl in America, 1818-1827) Juliet Noel (Mrs Pierre Toussaint)


Extramarital relationships between French & African settlers, occuring since slaves arrived in New Orleans about 1719, had evolved into an accepted social practice. The custom of freeing the children of such unions; the right of slaves to purchase their freedom; the policy of liberating enslaved workers for excellent service; and the arrival of free people of color from Haiti, Cuba & other Caribbean colonies led to the rise of a vocal free black population.

Through inheritance, military service, and a near monopoly of certain skilled trades, free blacks acquired wealth & social status. By the time Thomas Jefferson arranged for the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, New Orleans free blacks constituted nearly 20% of the city, while enslaved Africans comprised about 38% of the residents.  Women of color, slave & free, continued to wear their bright tignons well into the 19th century, and they continued to attract the attention of men regardless of class or color.


1786 Francois Beaucourt, Portrait of Servant Woman.

Throughout the 19C, tignon was a local, New Orleans word for the headwrap, a variation on the French word, chignon which refers to a smooth knot or twist or arrangement of hair that is worn at the nape of the neck.


1796 Thomas Rowlandson. Rachel Pringle of Barbados. Published by William Holland (London, 1796)

Elsewhere in America, headwraps were often referred to as kerchiefs by both African Americans & others.


Women of Santo Domingo in Tignons.

The anonymous Mississippi planter who wrote "Management of Negroes Upon Southern Estates" (1851) noted: "I give to my negroes four full suits of clothes with two pairs of shoes, every year, & to my women and girls a calico dress and two handkerchiefs extra"


Woman Wearing Red Tignon with Bag of Laundry.

In 1863, E. Botume described the people who greeted her boat as it docked at Beaufort, SC, "Some of the women had...bits of sailcloth for head handkerchiefs"


19th Century Tignon Wearing Women of Color.

Charlie Hudson, born in 1858, & enslaved in Georgia, remembered: "What yo' wore on yo' haid was a cap made out of scraps of cloth dey wove in de loom..."


Woman in Tignon Selling Fruits & Vegetables.

Landscape architect Frederick Law Olmstead, a northerner who traveled in the South before the American Civil War, tells of yet another way in which blacks acquired headwraps: "(The negroes) also purchase clothing for themselves, and, I note especially, are well supplied with handkerchiefs, which the men frequently, and the women nearly always, wear on their heads"


19th Century Mulatto Women and Tignons.

A Savannah editor bemoaned the "extravagant" dress of city blacks. Wade says that the journalist, " observing that a turban or handkerchief for the head was good enough for peasants,...noted that 'with our city colored population the old fashioned turban seems fast disappearing' " (Savannah Republican 6 June 1849)

19th Century Caribbean Island Women in Tignons.

Louis Hughes, born 1843, enslaved in Mississippi and Virginia, noted: "The cotton clothes worn by both men and women (house servants), and the turbans of the latter, were snowy white" After the family moved to the city, Hughes recalled, "Each of the women servants wore a new gay colored turban, which was tied differently from that of the ordinary servant, in some fancy knot"


19th Century New Orleans Tignon

In the Slave Narratives, Ebenezer Brown, enslaved in Mississippi, said: "(My mammy) wrap her hair, and tie it up in a cloth. My mammy cud tote a bucket of water on her head and never spill a drop. I seed her bring that milk in great big buckets from de pen on her head an' never lose one drop."

19th Century Portrait. Historic New Orleans

John Dixon Long, a white observer, remarked on a prayer-meeting held by enslaved people in Maryland in 1857. "At a given signal...the women will tighten their turbans, and the company will then form a circle around the singer..."


1840 House Servant with Tignon. Louisiana

Louis Hughes, born 1832, enslaved in Mississippi and Virginia, remembered "once when Boss went to Memphis and brought back a bolt of gingham for turbans for the female slaves...red & yellow check...to be worn on Sundays"


1844 Adoph Rinck. Possibly a portrait of Marie Laveaux.

In 1863, Fanny Kemble's description of the slaves on her husband's Georgia plantation included: "head handkerchiefs, that put one's very eyes out from a mile off..."


1910 Black Woman in Tignon, Ellsworth Woodward Louisiana

19C American Life - Law & Order

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State: District of Columbia Year: 1814

Location: Washington Location Type: County


Abstract: Sarah Burford seeks to settle an estate issue with her husband, John Burford, regarding ownership of five slaves and other personal property, left to her by her father, John Selby. She claims that Burford, "untill he could have an opportunity of getting her property into his possession as aforesaid, treated her with apparent kindness and affection; but as soon as he supposed he had secured her property to himself, he commenced a course of brutal & inhuman abuse of her." Sarah Burford asks that she "may be separated from bed & board during life, and your oratrix permitted to live as a feme sole, free and forever exonerated from the power, control & restraint of the said Burford."


You may contact the county to request the full record of this legal action.

The Digital Library on American Slavery, website University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Apologies to my email subscribers!!

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For a while now, I have been getting emails from readers who want more documented stories from 19C America.  Today I am adding as many primary sources as I can from the court records of many counties across the country.  These are mostly petitions from citizens for legal remedies to problems they find themselves having in everyday life.  I am afraid your email boxes will be full of these for a few days.  I am sorry, but I do hope you enjoy some of them.

Barbara Wells Sarudy

Delivery Boy

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John George Brown (1831-1913) Delivery Boy 1863


Expecting a little snow this week.  Winter is on the way.


19C American Life - Law & Order

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State: Florida Year: 1836

Location: Monroe Location Type: County

Abstract: Because of her husband's cruel and harsh treatment, Eliza Patterson seeks a divorce from Alexander Patterson of Key West. Shortly after their marriage in December 1832, Alexander brought a seventeen-year-old girl into their house and lived with her in "criminal connection." He also forced Eliza to sign a bill of sale for her slave, "her private property, of the value of $300." She asks for a divorce, the return of her slave, the return of household furniture worth $1,000, and proper support for herself and her child.

You may contact the county or the state to request the full record of this legal action.

The Digital Library on American Slavery, website University of North Carolina at Greensboro

19C American Folk Art - Attributed to William Matthew Prior 1806-1873 (Prior-Hamblin School)

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In the first half of the 19th century, before photography made it possible to have inexpensive true likenesses, portrait painters worked in most urban cities & often traveled from small town to small town, memorializing their clients for future generations.


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) William Whipper c 1835


Born in Bath, Maine, William Matthew Prior became an itinerant portrait & landscape painter who also painted on glass. By 1824, he had traveled to Portland, Maine, and lived there from 1831 to 1840. Prior was a most practical portrait painter, he would adjust his fees in accordance with what his sitters could pay.  He advertised in the "Maine Inquirer" in 1831 that "persons who wished a flat picture can have a likeness without shade or shadow at one-quarter price"


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Mrs. Nancy Lawson, wife of a Boston clothing merchant. 1843 (Prior-Hamblin School)


His son, Matthew Prior gave the following account of his father:
"My father--yes--my father was thought a great deal of. He used to start out early in the he morning and always found plenty of work to do. It seems he was an independent young man, full of ambition, and he worked his way up in the scales so fast that in his early twenties he painted a portrait of A. Hammett, Esp. It was exhibited at the Boston Anthenæum in 1831. When he was a small boy he painted the portrait of a neighbor on the barn door, which created quite an excitement in the village. yes, he heard considerable about it. Young as he was, he made up his mind then and there to become an artist, and when he was old enough he took up the trade of the itinerant portrait painter, walking along the dusty roads with a pack on his back...

"Father was always an itinerant portrait painter, but now he acquired a horse and wagon, and accompanied by his wife he would start out with the back of the wagon full of canvases, and in this way he journeyed far afield throughout this state and other states as well, where, to this day, you may run across his paintings. When his two children grew out of babyhood, he carried them along with him, which made quite a family party, so it must have been quite a circumstance to put them all up for the purpose of getting a portrait painted. it was the habit of the day to give these artists food and lodging, which was included in the price of the portrait."



William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Margaret Gardener Howard (Prior-Hamblin School)


Prior executed some of the 19th century’s most respectful portraits of free men & women of color, suggesting that he may have held abolitionist sympathies or beliefs, which was fairly common in New England. Prior's portrayal of free blacks elicit the same seriousness & respect as his white clients. Prior avoids the caricature sometimes seen in others depictions of African-Americans.


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Three Sisters of the Copeland Family 1854 (Prior-Hamblin School)


Prior was born into a seafaring family in Bath, Maine. His father, Matthew, & brother, Barker, were both lost at sea in 1815.  Prior decided not to go to sea & trained to become an ornamental painter. Advertisements in the Maine Inquirer from 1827 through 1831, detail the types of projects he undertook during this period, from re-japanning tea trays and tin waiters in a “tasty style” to restoring oil portraits. By 1823, however, he was primarily painting portraits.


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873)  The Burnish Sisters 1854 (Prior-Hamblin School)


In an effort to solicit more business, Prior put this notice in his local Portland newspaper on February 28, 1828, which declared: "Portrait painter, Wm. M. Prior, offers his services to the public. Those who wish for a likeness at a reasonable price are invited to call soon. Side views and profiles of children at reduced prices." Apparently people took him up on his offer. His entrepreneurial approach made painted portraits available to a wider range of clients.


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) or Sturtevant J. Hamblin (American artist, 1817-1884) Mary Cary and Susan Elizabeth Johnson, 1848 (Prior-Hamblin School)


A label attached to the back of Prior’s portrait Nat Todd, painted about 1848, announced: “PORTRAITS /PAINTED IN THIS STYLE!/Done in about an hour’s sitting./Price 2,92 including Frame, Glass, & c./ Please call at Trenton Street/East Boston/WM. M. PRIOR.”
 

William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873)(Prior-Hamblin School)


In 1828, Prior married Rosamond Clark Hamblin uniting him with a large family of painters & glaizers with whose fortunes & movements he became intetwined. Today there is often confusion in trying to distinguish among unsigned portraits produced by William Matthew Prior, his in-laws Sturtevant J. Hamblin (active 1837–1856); George G.Hartwell (1815–1901); & William W. Kennedy. E. W. Blake was also associated with this group. The works by these interrelated artists are sometimes refered to as the Prior-Hamblin School. Sometime between 1831 & 1834, Prior moved with his growing family to Portland, Maine, where he began a pattern of living with or near his Hamblin relatives. By 1841, the Prior and Hamblin families had moved together to Boston, where they lived in the home of Nathaniel Hamblin.


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Two Children with Dog Minny on a Ribbon 1840 (Prior-Hamblin School)


By 1846, the Priors & their large family were living in their own home at 36 Trenton Street, which Prior dubbed the “Painting Garret.”  The number of portraits surviving from this period attest to Prior’s popularity despite the advent of photography. He continued to travel throughout New England and as far south as Baltimore, Maryland, in search of commissions, sometimes accompanied by his sons.


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Issac Josiah and William Mulford Hand (Prior-Hamblin School)


As early as 1838, Prior had offered posthumous portraiture, but during the 1850s & 1860s he advertised this practice, but now using the “spirit effect,” a gift he claimed he had received after his conversion to Millerism. In 1840, Prior probably saw Adventist leader William Miller preach during a major convocation in Casco, Maine. He & his brother-in-law Joseph G. Hamblin became zealous converts; and Prior wrote at least two books on Miller, even after the evangelist's predictions failed to occur.  In his books, Prior explained, that his visionary beliefs enabled him to paint posthumous portraits “by spirit effect.”


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) (Prior-Hamblin School)

During the 1850s that Prior began to paint “fancy” pictures of Mount Vernon & Washington’s tomb, ice skaters on ponds, romantic landscapes, & moonlit scenes. He also applied his earlier experience of reverse painting on glass clock dials to create portraits in verre églomisé of George & Martha Washington, Abraham Lincoln, a& other historical figures.

The paintings I am posting here have been attributed to William Matthew Prior but may have been painted by some of his in-laws or others.  I am surely not positive.  Anyway, just relax and enjoy.


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Young Woman (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Rosamond Clark Prior, the Artist's Wife (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) John Thayer 1848 (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Mary Jane Anthony Nichols (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Miss Jones with Her Dog and Cat 1846 (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Girl with a Pink Bow (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Portrait of a Young Girl (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) A Young Woman (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Young Girl in Blue Dress 1852 (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) A Young Lady (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Baby with Rattle (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) A Young Girl (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Girl with Dog (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Young Lady (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Girl with Flowers (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Two Andrews Children (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Little Miss Fairfield 1850 (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Two Andrews Children (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Lydia and William Anderson (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Girl in Green Dress (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Young Boy and Girl (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Tim Thumb (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Young Boy with Toy Whip and Toy Wagon (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) Young Boy in Gray Costume with Black (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873) (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Little Child with Big Dog 1848 (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Janey in Pink and White Dress 1840 (Prior-Hamblin School)

William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Girl Seated on Bench 1840 (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Miss Fairfield 1850 (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) William Allen 1843 (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Girl with a Black Cat (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Boy with a Riding Crop (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Boy in White Dress (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Child in Stripped Shirt with Whip (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American artist, 1806-1873)


William Matthew Prior, (American artist, 1806-1873) Baby in Blue (Prior-Hamblin School)


William Matthew Prior (American, 1806 - 1873) Self Portrait 1825

See

Hickman, Madelia & Pratt, Wayne, The 'Celebrated' William Matthew Prior (1806-1873),Antiques & Fine Art Magazine

Krashes, David, Understanding the Prior-Hamblen School of Artists A Little Bit Better,Maine Antique Digest, July, 2011

Rumford, Beatrix T. American Folk Portraits Paintings and Drawings from the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Center. New York Graphic Society, 1981. 176-81.

Sears, Clara Endicott, Some American Primitives: A Study of New England Faces and Folk Portraits, Kennikat Press, Inc., Port Washington, N.Y., 1941. 31-50.

19C American Life - Law & Order

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State: North Carolina Year: 1803

Location: Beaufort Location Type: County

Abstract: Arnold and Euphan Rhodes, though husband and wife, have lived apart for two years. As there is no hope of reconciliation, they jointly pray that a law may be passed "disolving the bands of marriage between your said petitioners & thereby ... Divorce them from Each other -- leaving Each free to Intermarry again to purchase, receive, & dispose of their seperate propperty."

You may contact the county to request the full record of this legal action.

The Digital Library on American Slavery, website University of North Carolina at Greensboro

19C American Folk Art - Prior-Hamblen School

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Prior-Hamblen School Portrait of woman attributed to EW Blake c 1845


Here are more paintings attributed by curators or sellers of folk art to the Prior-Hamblen or Hamblin School. Five artists are general identified as being part of the Prior-Hamblin School who were influenced by artist William Matthew Prior:

Sturtevant Hamblen or Hablin (1817-1884), Prior's brother-in-law, whose family the Prior family lived with in Maine, & in Boston, during the 1830's - 1840's;

George Hartwell (1815–1901), whose niece Elizabeth Hartwell married a Hamblen son, James Hamblen, and who also lived in Boston during the time that Prior lived there. Hartwell returned to his home state of Maine, living in Lewiston, where he was a respected portrait, sign, window-shade, & banner painter. He moved to the home of his nephew Harry Hartwell in the neighboring town of Auburn, about just before his death at the age of 86. ;

J. (Jacob) Bailey Moore (1815-1893) of Candia, New Hampshire.  For a brief time he worked in Boston before returning to New Hampshire.   During his life he worked as a journalist, which was the profession of his father, and as a phrenologist as well as an itinerant artist;

William W. Kennedy (1817-1871), was born in New Hampshire & worked as a portrait painter in New Bedford, Massachusetts; Ledyard, Connecticut; and Berwick, Maine from 1845-1847. He moved to Maryland in 1849 or 1850, living at various locations in Baltimore with his wife & 3 children until 1869.  No direct relationship to Prior has been found, other than that he published an advertisement in New Bedford similar to advertisements used by Prior;

E. W. Blake was listed in the Boston City Directory as a physician at the Boston Lunatic Hospital living on Beach Street near Harrison Avenue in Boston in 1843. From 1844-1849, he was listed at 28 Harrison Avenue. Both locations were within easy walking distance of Prior's residence on Marion Street. Blake was apparently influenced by Prior, as he frequently used a small-size format similar to that used by Prior and had a simple style, not realistic. Blake's portraits, except for 2 known signed paintings, have usually been attributed to Prior or to the Prior-Hamben School.


Prior-Hamblen School


Prior-Hamben School 1840s


Prior-Hamblen School Baby Boy with Pencil c 1835


Prior-Hamblen School A Rhode Island Woman attrubuted to William W Kennedy


Prior-Hamblen School Sarah Gray 1843


Prior-Hamblen School


Prior-Hamblen School Young Girl with Black Braids


Prior-Hamblen School 1840s


Prior-Hamblen School Baby


Prior-Hamblen School Young Woman c 1840


Prior-Hamblen School Baby Girl with Ribbons


Prior-Hamblen School Dark Haired Young Woman with Bow-Knotted Pearls and Brooch


Prior-Hamblen School Girl in Blue Dress c 1840


Prior-Hamblen School Rosy-Cheeked Young Girl Wearing a Lace-Trimmed White Dress


Prior-Hamblen School Young Girl with Flowers


Prior-Hamblen School Young Girl Holding Flowers


Prior-Hamblen School attr to Sturtevant Hamblen (American painter, 1817–1884) Adelaide Endora Smith, Waterville, ME, 1852


Prior-Hamblen School Young Woman


Prior-Hamblen School Baby


Prior-Hamblen School


Prior-Hamblen School Young Girl in Blue c 1835


E W Blake of the Prior-Hamblen School, Boy With Rocking Horse 1846

19C American Life - Law & Order

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State: North Carolina  Year: 1803

Location: Beaufort  Location Type: County

Abstract: The relatives of Euphan Alston Rhodes ask that the said Euphan be granted a divorce from Captain Arnold Rhodes. They recount that their relative married Rhodes in 1795 when she was seventeen years old; at the time, Euphan possessed "a valuable Estate in Lands &c besides a number of valuable Slaves.” The petitioners lament that the said Rhodes wasted his bride's property shortly after their marriage, losing all the slaves and a large portion of the real estate. They further decry that Rhodes has "abandoned himself to Idleness, Intoxication, gambling &c." Of the belief that "a mutual loathing possess them Each towards the other," the petitioners pray "that a Law may be passed by your Honorable body disolving the band of marriage between the Said Arnold, & Euphan Alston Rhodes & thereby fully Divorcing them for Ever from Each other."

You may contact the county to request the full record of this legal action.

The Digital Library on American Slavery, website University of North Carolina at Greensboro

19C American Folk Art - Attributed to Sturtevant J Hamblin 1817-1884 (Prior-Hamblin School)

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Attributed to Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884), but probably by "Blake not Hamblin" Boy in Blue c 1840 (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J. Hamblin worked as a portrait painter in Portland, Maine; and, sometime around 1839, he was working in Boston, Massachusetts, with his family. His facts are a little vague and can be confusing. His last name is sometimes spelled Hamblen, & he is sometimes listed as L. J. Hamblin. I am not certain of any of these attributions, as the Prior-Hamblin school is filled with great folk art with fuzzy attributions.


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant worked with his brothers Eli, Joseph, Nathaniel, & their sister Rosamond, wife of artist William Matthew Prior. When Rosamond married Prior, the Hamblins & the Priors joined forces creating a family art business. Their art styles, as well as many other New England folk artists of that era, are very similar and nearly indistinguishable. Today, most unsigned paintings done in this style are commonly referred to as the Prior-Hamblin School. There seem to be only 7 known signed portraits by Sturtevant Hamblen. Sturtevant was listed as a portrait painter in Boston until 1856, when he & his brother Joseph went into the men’s furnishings business.


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Little Boy with Flowers (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Young Woman c 1840 (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Pair of Double Portraits Laura Ann 9 yrs; Mary Ellen 7 yrs; George Albert 4 yrs; William Wood 2 yrs (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Portrait of a Young Lady (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884)(Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Little Girl Holding Apple c 1840 (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Boy with Riding Crop (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) The Younger Generation c 1850 (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Young Girl with Flowers (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Baby with Doll c 1850 (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Mother and Child (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Boy with Hoop (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Little Girl with Pet Rabbit c 1845 (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Sisters in Red c 1840-50 (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Sisters in Blue c 1840 (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Young Boy Holding a Bow and Arrow with a Drum on the Floor (Prior-Hamblin School)


Sturtevant J Hamblin (American artist 1817-1884) Girl with Apple (Prior-Hamblin School)

19C American Life - Law & Order

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State: North Carolina  Year: 1805

Location: Edgecombe   Type: County


Abstract: Winny Manning confesses that her husband Eli "is absolutely impotent & by nature rendered a useless man as a husband." She admits that as "unpleasant as that may appear to a young & healthy woman" it is "but trifling" compared to his suspicions of her entertaining "illicit connection with every man, both white & black that may have seen her," which at times has resulted in a "certain danger of her life." Winny therefore asks that an act be passed divorcing her "from the said Eli Manning." Eli Manning, "on his part," states that "the happy ends for which matrimony was ordained has been frustrated & rendered a fruitfull sorce of the most unpleasant reflections and that reconciliation will never take place." He therefore "begs leave most freely & sincerely to join his sd Wife Winny in praying your honorable body to relieve your truly suffering Petitioners by granting them a divorce."

You may contact the county to request the full record of this legal action.

The Digital Library on American Slavery, website University of North Carolina at Greensboro


19C American Folk Art - Attributed to George G. Hartwell 1815-1901 of the Prior-Hamblen School

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George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributedChild Holding Doll and Shoe c 1845


George G. Hartwell was associated with the Prior-Hamblin group of painters. He was related to William Matthew Prior by marriage and he painted signs and portraits in Bridgewater, Massachusetts and Auburn, Maine. His flat style of painting is very close to that of William Matthew Prior, Sturtevant Hamblin, George Bailey Moore, and G. Alden. These paintings are attributed to him, because he did not sign his work.


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Young Woman in Grey Dress with Rose c 1840


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Young Boy in Grey


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Unknown Woman, probably New England, ca. 1840.


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Ann Maria Wilcox Holding a Rose


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Young Woman


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Girl with Rose


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Woman holding Red Book


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Child in Red Dress


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Woman in Blue Dress


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Boy in Scroll-Back Chair


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Mary Williams (Mrs. John Williams)


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Albert Winslow Trow


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Woman Holding a Rose


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Girl in Pink Dress


George G. Hartwell (American artist, 1815-1901) Prior-Hamblen School attributed Girl in Blue Dress

19C American Life - Law & Order

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State: North Carolina   Year: 1809

Location: Ashe   Location Type: County

Abstract: Alexander Smith seeks a divorce from his wife Sarah Dickson Smith. He states that he married Sarah in 1784 and that they lived together for many years "in domestic peace and pleasure," raising a family of five girls. Smith confides, however, that Sarah "became base in her conduct" and in 1808 "she went off with a Mullatoe man nearly as Black as an Negro and has lived without the Bounds of this State with said man of mixt collur ever since." The petitioner prays that he be divorced from his wife Sarah and that she be forever prevented “in Law or in Equity to Claim any right Title or interest to any part of your Petitioner's Estate or property real or personal."

You may contact the county to request the full record of this legal action.

The Digital Library on American Slavery, website University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Colorized photo of Thomas Edison

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1878 Thomas Edison - colorized photo - pinterest.com

Colorized photo of Abraham Lincoln

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Abraham Lincoln 1865 - reddit.com colorized history

Colorized photo of Annie Oakley

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American sharpshooter, Annie Oakley, ca. 1900 - reddit.com colorized history

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