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Carl Rohl-Smith

Carl Wilhelm Daniel Rohl-Smith[1] (April 3, 1848- August 20, 1900) was a Danish American sculptor who was active in Europe and the United States from 1870 to 1900. He sculpted a number of life-size and small bronzes based on Greco-Roman mythological themes in Europe as well as a wide number of bas-reliefs, busts, funerary monuments, and statues throughout Denmark, the German Confederation, and Italy. Emigrating to the United States in 1886, he once more produced a number of sculptures for private citizens. His most noted American works were a statue of a soldier for a Battle of the Alamo memorial in Texas, a statue of Benjamin Franklin for the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893, a statue group in Chicago commemorating the Fort Dearborn Massacre, and the General William Tecumseh Sherman Monument in Washington, D.C.

Carl Rohl-Smith
Carl Rohl-Smith c. 1899
Born(1848-04-03)April 3, 1848
DiedAugust 20, 1900(1900-08-20) (aged 52)
Copenhagen, Denmark
NationalityDanish American
EducationCopenhagen Academy
Known forSculpture
Notable workGeneral William Tecumseh Sherman Monument
Iowa Soldiers and Sailors Monument
William Belknap Funerary Monument
MovementRealism (visual arts)

Early life

 
Caspar Smith, Carl Rohl-Smith's linguist father.

Rohl-Smith was born on April 3, 1848, in Roskilde, Denmark,[2] to Caspar Wilhelm Smith and Johanne Marie Frederikke Sophie Röhl Smith. His father was a philologist at the University of Copenhagen. As a child, Rohl-Smith exhibited an artistic nature and was making sculptures out of any materials he could find.[2]

Rohl-Smith studied at the Copenhagen Academy under Herman Wilhelm Bissen beginning in 1865, and graduated in 1869. During his education, he won several prizes for his work.[3] He then studied under Albert Wolff at the Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin from 1870 to 1872.[4] His 1872 bronze Wounded Philoctetes won a gold medal, and was purchased by the King of Greece.[3] He completed additional studies in Rome, Vienna, and Paris from 1877 to 1881.[1][3][5] While in Rome, he executed another major work, Bellerophon, in 1872. It was purchased by the Danish embassy in Rome.[3]

Rohl-Smith became a professor at the Copenhagen Academy in 1885.[1][5]

Rohl-Smith was already recognized as a prominent sculptor in Denmark and Austria-Hungary. He contributed a number of architectural figures for Frederik's Church (also known as the Marmorkirken, or Marble Church) in Copenhagen, the Austrian Parliament Building in Vienna (the Akroterie, and the Winged Nike over the main entrance), and for numerous parks and public spaces in Denmark, the North German Confederation, and states of the former German Confederation.[3][6] Perhaps his best known work in Europe was a bronze statue of Ajax, commissioned in 1878 for the second Christiansborg Palace in Copenhagen. It won an Honorable Mention at the art exhibit at the Paris World's Fair of 1878.[3] It was destroyed in the 1884 fire which consumed the palace.[6]

At some point before leaving Denmark for the United States, he married his wife, Sara.

American career

In 1886,[7] Rohl-Smith emigrated to the United States and became an American citizen.[2] Although the sculptor had used the last name Smith in Denmark, he began using the name Rohl-Smith in the U.S.[3] He settled in New York City, and worked at the Hecla Iron Works in Brooklyn and then at the Perth Amboy Terra Cotta Company in Perth Amboy, New Jersey.[7] Between 1886 and 1889, he executed numerous sculptures of famous people in bas-relief and busts. He also designed a number of larger-than-life funerary statues and monuments for famous and wealthy individuals in Boston, Massachusetts; Memphis, Tennessee; and Louisville, Kentucky.[6] One of these included the funerary monument to William W. Belknap in Arlington National Cemetery near Washington, D.C.[8]

Rohl-Smith moved to Louisville, Kentucky, in 1889.[3] He executed a funerary monument to Henry A. Montgomery, a prominent local businessman and politician and founder in 1888 of the New Memphis Jockey Club.[3] (Montgomery had died during the club's opening.) In 1890, Rohl-Smith was asked to implement Harriet A. Ketcham's design for the Iowa Soldiers and Sailors Monument. Ketcham's design was chosen by the state legislature in 1888, but she died of a stroke in 1890. Rohl-Smith was commissioned to finish the work, which was completed in 1896.[9]

Rohl-Smith's most important works prior to 1892 were his Alamo soldier and statue of Judge Reid.[6] The Texas Legislature commissioned James Senille Clark, a well-known manufacturer of stock monuments, to erect a memorial to the Battle of the Alamo on the grounds of the state capitol. Clark, in turn, commissioned Rohl-Smith in 1891 to sculpt the bronze statue of the soldier atop the monument. It is the oldest bronze statue in Texas.[10] Rohl-Smith's other notable American work at this time was a statue of Kentucky Superior Court Judge Richard Reid.[6][11]

Franklin statue and rise to fame

 
Electricity Building at the 1893 World's Fair, with Rohl-Smith's statue of Benjamin Franklin in front of the apse.

Rohl-Smith moved to Chicago in 1891.[12] His next important American work came in 1892.[6] The commission was for a plaster statue of a young Benjamin Franklin holding a kite for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition.[13] Rohl-Smith's prestige was such that he was also named Royal Danish Commissioner to the fair.[12] The Franklin statue was widely praised.[6] In 1894, it was gifted to the University of Pennysylvania, where it stood until it decayed in 1895.[14] Around this time, Rohl-Smith became associated with Peter Emil Dreier, a Danish American lawyer and Danish consul in Chicago. Dreier's large circle of friends included many prominent painters and sculptors, and Rohl-Smith's fame began to spread in the artistic community.[7]

The praise for the Franklin statue caught the attention of Chicago industrialist George Pullman, who commissioned Rohl-Smith's next great work. Pullman's Chicago mansion was built on or near the site of the 1812 Fort Dearborn Massacre, in which 28 men, 12 children, and two women were killed by rogue warriors of the Potawatomi Native American tribe. In 1893, Pullman commissioned Rohl-Smith to create a memorial to the Fort Dearborn Massacre (whose 85th anniversary was approaching).[15] After researching the event with his wife, Rohl-Smith decided that the most important and dramatic part of the narrative was the incident in which a rogue warrior is prevented from killing Margaret Helm and her child by the Potawatomi chief Black Partridge. Dr. Isaac Van Voorhees lies dying beneath Helm's feet. Two members of the Lakota nation, Kicking Bear and Short Bull, were imprisoned at nearby Fort Sheridan for having fired at United States Army troops during the Wounded Knee Massacre in 1890. Short Bull posed as the less muscular, younger warrior attempting to kill Helm, while Kicking Bear posed as Black Partridge.[16] Pullman donated the sculpture to the city of Chicago.[17] Pullman was so pleased with the memorial that in 1895 he commissioned Rohl-Smith to sculpt bas-relief portraits of his parents for Pullman Memorial Universalist Church in Albion, New York.[18]

From 1891 to 1897, Rohl-Smith continued to produce an extensive number of bas-reliefs, busts, and statues of famous people.[12]

Sherman monument

Rohl-Smith received his last, and perhaps greatest, commission in 1895. Renowned American Civil War Major General William Tecumseh Sherman died on February 14, 1891. On July 5, 1892, Congress enacted legislation authorizing a General William Tecumseh Sherman Monument and establishing the Sherman Memorial Commission.[19] In 1895, the Sherman Memorial Commission issued a call for proposals for an equestrian statue of Sherman. A committee of the National Sculpture Society agreed to judge the submissions.[20] When the competition closed on December 31, 1894, 23 sculptors had submitted proposals.[21] Models of all the proposed statues were exhibited in Washington, D.C., to large crowds. The submission by Carl Rohl-Smith generated the most popular acclaim.[22] The National Sculpture Society (NSS) narrowed the submissions down to a short list of four.[23] The submission by Rohl-Smith did not make the short list; indeed, it was ranked almost dead last by the NSS committee.[24] On May 27, the Sherman Memorial Commission overruled the judging committee and chose Rohl-Smith's design.[23] The National Sculpture Society was outraged, and protested the award strongly to the memorial commission and the press.[22] The New York Times called the decision "one of the most discreditable events ever in the annals of the public art of the United States".[25] Senator Edward O. Wolcott sponsored legislation to investigate the award process. Although his resolution was not successful, the Senate debate over the award process was rancorous and showed the Senate's deep distrust of "art experts". Rohl-Smith was accused of using political influence to win the commission, an accusation he vehemently denied. After two months of protests, the National Sculpture Society ceased to contest the award.[22]

After winning the Sherman Monument commission, Rohl-Smith moved to Washington, D.C., in 1897 and set up a studio on the White House grounds next to the memorial's location.[2][12] A large, barn-like structure was built on Treasury Place NW. With a front door extending 50 feet (15 m) high, verandas on three sides, lean-tos in the rear for mixing of plaster, tall windows, and a tin roof, the structure was intended not only to function as a workshop for the construction of a life-size model of the Sherman monument but also as living quarters for the Rohl-Smiths.[26]

Carl Rohl-Smith never saw his Sherman Monument completed. He died in Copenhagen in August 1900, and was buried in Vestre Cemetery.

Although the government determined that the contract with Rohl-Smith was null after his death,[27] the memorial commission agreed to allow Rohl-Smith's assistant and wife, Sara, to oversee the statue's completion. Mrs. Rohl-Smith asked sculptors Theo Kitson, Bush Brown, and Jens Ferdinand Willumsen to help with the statue's completion.[28] Later reports do not mention Brown or Willumsen's work on the monument, but Lauritz Jensen worked on the main statue,[29] while Danish sculptor Stephen Sinding modelled the War and Peace figures. Sinding created plaster models for these pieces from Rohl-Smith's sketches. But upon review, the postures and sizes of the two figures were found not to harmonize with the rest of the monument. Sigvald Asbjornsen remodelled them.[29] As Rohl-Smith had already completed three of the four soldier figures on the corners of the monument, Sigvald Asbjornsen completed the fourth. Sources differ as to whether Asbjornsen completed the artilleryman or the cavalryman.[30] Kitson completed the medallions which depicted the corps commanders who served under Sherman.[29] Jensen completed the four bas relief panels based on work already completed by Rohl-Smith, as well as completing the badge (eagle) of the Army of the Tennessee.[31] The design for the stone pedestal was complete at the time of Rohl-Smith's death.[29] The monument was dedicated by President Theodore Roosevelt on October 15, 1903.[32]

Death

Rohl-Smith fell ill with malaria[33] and returned to Europe in June 1896, where he stayed until the fall.[34] Although Rohl-Smith returned to the United States, his ongoing ill health (due to another attack of malaria)[33] kept him from working on the Sherman statue through October 1898.[35] Ill health continued to plague him.[36] By March 1900, he had only completed the design for the pedestal (which had been erected) and three of the four corner "sentry" figures. Only sketches had been made for the equestrian statue itself, the side panels, the "War" and "Peace" statue groups, and the medallions.[33]

Rohl-Smith departed Washington for Denmark in July 1900 to escape the city's severe summer heat and humidity.[37] In August 1900, Rohl-Smith became suddenly ill. He died of Bright's disease[38] at St. Josef's Hospital in Copenhagen on August 22, 1900, with his wife at his side.[39]

Sara Rohl-Smith died in Copenhagen in August 1921.[40]

Notable works

  • Bellerophon, Danish embassy, Rome, Italy, 1872.
  • Akroterie and Winged Nike, Austrian Parliament Building, Vienna, Austria, c. 1874 to 1883.
  • Ajax, Christiansborg Palace, Copenhagen, Denmark, 1878 (now lost).
  • Apollo and Diana, Pan and Daphne, Summer, Winter (architectural sculpture), Eremitage Palace, Dyrehaven, Denmark, 1881–1886.[3]
  • Saint Athanasius, Saint Irenaeus of Lyon, John the Baptist, Moses (architectural sculpture), Marmorkirken (The Marble Church), Copenhagen, Denmark, 1883–1884.[3]
  • Bacchante Group, private collection, United States, 1885.[3]
  • Young Benjamin Franklin With Kite, World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois, United States, 1893 (now lost).
  • The Fort Dearborn Massacre Monument, Chicago History Museum, Chicago, Illinois, United States, 1893.
  • Bas-relief portraits of Emily Caroline Pullman and James Lewis Pullman, Pullman Memorial Universalist Church, Albion, New York, United States, 1895.
  • Equestrian Statue of General John M. Corse, Crapo Park, Burlington, Iowa, 1896.
  • William W. Belknap Monument, Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington County, Virginia, United States, 1897.
  • General William Tecumseh Sherman Monument, President's Park, Washington D.C., United States (unfinished)

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b c Carr, p. 375.
  2. ^ a b c d Society of the Army of the Tennessee, p. 61. Accessed 2012-11-23.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Sara Rohl-Smith letter to F.E. Elwell regarding Carl Rohl-Smith, 1902. Thomas J. Watson Library, Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 2. Accessed 2012-11-23.
  4. ^ Goode, p. 590.
  5. ^ a b "Art Notes." New York Times. October 26, 1891.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Alison, Young E. "The Franklin Statue." Engineering Magazine. 2:6 (March 1892), p. 827. Accessed 2012-11-23.
  7. ^ a b c Petersen, p. 121.
  8. ^ Jacob and Remsberg, p. 161.
  9. ^ Stock, p. 100.
  10. ^ Little, p. 59.
  11. ^ Reid was a judge in the Kentucky Superior Court in Mount Sterling, Kentucky. In April 1884, Judge Reid was severely beaten by local lawyer and church pastor John Jay Cornelison, who was outraged by an unfavorable Superior Court decision recently handed down against him. Cornelison mistakenly believed Reid to be responsible for the opinion (he was not). Cornelison beat Reid 25 times in his office with a cane. Reid fled into the street, where Cornelison administered 75 lashes with a bullwhip. Although public opinion held that Judge Reid should defend his honor and either duel with or attack Cornelison in turn, Judge Reid demanded that the law take its course. Reid was roundly condemned as a coward. He took his own life a month later. See, generally: Klotter, Kentucky Justice, Southern Honor, and American Manhood.
  12. ^ a b c d Sara Rohl-Smith letter to F.E. Elwell regarding Carl Rohl-Smith, 1902. Thomas J. Watson Library, Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 3. Accessed 2012-11-23.
  13. ^ "The Plaster Lighting Catcher of the 1893 World's Fair: Carl Rohl-Smith's Benjamin Franklin statue (Part 1)". Chicagos 1893 Worlds Fair. 2022-09-03. Retrieved 2022-09-12.
  14. ^ "The Plaster Lighting Catcher of the 1893 World's Fair: Carl Rohl-Smith's Benjamin Franklin statue (Part 2)". Chicagos 1893 Worlds Fair. 2022-09-04. Retrieved 2022-09-12.
  15. ^ Rand, McNally & Co.'s Handy Guide to Chicago and World's Columbian Exposition, p. 132. Accessed 2012-11-23.
  16. ^ Kirkland, p. 210-211. Accessed 2012-11-23.
  17. ^ "Fort Dearborn Massacre." New York Times. June 2, 1893.
  18. ^ Album of Genealogy and Biography, Cook County, Illinois, p. 233. Accessed 2012-11-23.
  19. ^ Dodge, p. 233. Accessed 2012-11-15.
  20. ^ Jacob and Remsberg, p. 92.
  21. ^ "Monument to Gen. Sherman." New York Times. January 2, 1896.
  22. ^ a b c Jacob and Remsberg, p. 93.
  23. ^ a b "Gen. Sherman Monument." New York Times. May 28, 1896.
  24. ^ Jacob and Remsberg, p. 92-93.
  25. ^ "The Sherman Statue." New York Times. May 30, 1896.
  26. ^ "Home for Sherman Model." Washington Post. October 8, 1897.
  27. ^ "Death Ended the Contract." Washington Post. February 10, 1901.
  28. ^ "To Finish Sherman Statue." Washington Post. March 15, 1901; "Will Aid on Sherman Statue." Washington Post. May 18, 1901.
  29. ^ a b c d "Sherman Group Cast." Washington Post. June 7, 1903.
  30. ^ "General William Tecumseh Sherman Monument, (sculpture)". SIRIS
  31. ^ Keim, Rohl-Smith, and Griffin, p. 30. Accessed 2012-11-16.
  32. ^ "Sherman Unveiled." Washington Post. October 16, 1903.
  33. ^ a b c "Working On A Statue." Washington Post. March 6, 1900.
  34. ^ "Sculpture Society's Position." New York Times. July 9, 1896; "Sherman Statue Exhibit." New York Times. February 1, 1897.
  35. ^ "National Capital Topics." New York Times. October 2, 1898.
  36. ^ It is possible that he fell ill for an extended period a third time between 1898 and March 1900. See: "Defends Dead Artist." Washington Post. September 13, 1900.
  37. ^ "Studios Now Empty." Washington Post. July 22, 1900.
  38. ^ Renal failure is an uncommon side-effect of malaria.
  39. ^ "Death of Carl Rohl-Smith." Washington Post. August 23, 1900; "Carl Rohl-Smith Dies." New York Times. August 23, 1900.
  40. ^ "Mrs. Sarah Rohl-Smith." New York Times. August 18, 1921.

Bibliography

  • Album of Genealogy and Biograyhy, Cook County, Illinois. Chicago: Calumet Book & Engraving Co., 1898.
  • Carr, Carolyn Kinder. Revisiting the White City: American Art at the 1893 World's Fair. Washington, D.C.: National Portrait Gallery, 1993.
  • Dodge, Grenville Mellen. Personal Recollections of President Abraham Lincoln, General Ulysses S. Grant and General William T. Sherman. Council Bluffs, Iowa: The Monarch Printing Company, 1914.
  • Goode, James M. The Outdoor Sculpture of Washington, D.C.: A Comprehensive Historical Guide. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1974.
  • Huang, Nian-Sheng. Benjamin Franklin in American Thought and Culture, 1790-1990. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1994.
  • Jacob, Kathryn Allamong and Remsberg, Edwin Harlan. Testament to Union: Civil War Monuments in Washington, D.C. Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998.
  • Keim, De B. Randolph; Rohl-Smith, Carl Vilhelm Daniel; and Griffin, Appleton P.C. Sherman. A Memorial in Art, Oratory, and Literature by the Society of the Army of Tennessee, With the Aid of the Congress of the United States of America. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1904.
  • Kirkland, Joseph. The Chicago Massacre of 1812: With Illustrations and Historical Documents. Chicago: Dibble Publishing, 1893.
  • Klotter, James C. Kentucky Justice, Southern Honor, and American Manhood. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2006.
  • Little, Carol Morris. A Comprehensive Guide to Outdoor Sculpture in Texas. Austin, Tex.: University of Texas Press, 1996.
  • Petersen, Peter L. The Danes in America. Atlanta: Atlanta Book Company, 1980.
  • Rand, McNally & Co.'s Handy Guide to Chicago and World's Columbian Exposition. Chicago: Rand, McNally & Co., 1893.
  • Society of the Army of the Tennessee. Report of the Proceedings of the Society of the Army of the Tennessee at the Thirty-Fourth Meeting Held at Washington, D.C. Cincinnati: F.W. Freeman, 1906.
  • Stock, Janice Beck. Amazing Iowa. Nashville, Tenn.: Rutledge Hill Press, 2003.

carl, rohl, smith, carl, wilhelm, daniel, rohl, smith, april, 1848, august, 1900, danish, american, sculptor, active, europe, united, states, from, 1870, 1900, sculpted, number, life, size, small, bronzes, based, greco, roman, mythological, themes, europe, wel. Carl Wilhelm Daniel Rohl Smith 1 April 3 1848 August 20 1900 was a Danish American sculptor who was active in Europe and the United States from 1870 to 1900 He sculpted a number of life size and small bronzes based on Greco Roman mythological themes in Europe as well as a wide number of bas reliefs busts funerary monuments and statues throughout Denmark the German Confederation and Italy Emigrating to the United States in 1886 he once more produced a number of sculptures for private citizens His most noted American works were a statue of a soldier for a Battle of the Alamo memorial in Texas a statue of Benjamin Franklin for the World s Columbian Exposition in 1893 a statue group in Chicago commemorating the Fort Dearborn Massacre and the General William Tecumseh Sherman Monument in Washington D C Carl Rohl SmithCarl Rohl Smith c 1899Born 1848 04 03 April 3 1848Roskilde DenmarkDiedAugust 20 1900 1900 08 20 aged 52 Copenhagen DenmarkNationalityDanish AmericanEducationCopenhagen AcademyKnown forSculptureNotable workGeneral William Tecumseh Sherman MonumentIowa Soldiers and Sailors MonumentWilliam Belknap Funerary MonumentMovementRealism visual arts Contents 1 Early life 2 American career 2 1 Franklin statue and rise to fame 2 2 Sherman monument 3 Death 4 Notable works 5 Gallery 6 References 7 BibliographyEarly life Edit Caspar Smith Carl Rohl Smith s linguist father Rohl Smith was born on April 3 1848 in Roskilde Denmark 2 to Caspar Wilhelm Smith and Johanne Marie Frederikke Sophie Rohl Smith His father was a philologist at the University of Copenhagen As a child Rohl Smith exhibited an artistic nature and was making sculptures out of any materials he could find 2 Rohl Smith studied at the Copenhagen Academy under Herman Wilhelm Bissen beginning in 1865 and graduated in 1869 During his education he won several prizes for his work 3 He then studied under Albert Wolff at the Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin from 1870 to 1872 4 His 1872 bronze Wounded Philoctetes won a gold medal and was purchased by the King of Greece 3 He completed additional studies in Rome Vienna and Paris from 1877 to 1881 1 3 5 While in Rome he executed another major work Bellerophon in 1872 It was purchased by the Danish embassy in Rome 3 Rohl Smith became a professor at the Copenhagen Academy in 1885 1 5 Rohl Smith was already recognized as a prominent sculptor in Denmark and Austria Hungary He contributed a number of architectural figures for Frederik s Church also known as the Marmorkirken or Marble Church in Copenhagen the Austrian Parliament Building in Vienna the Akroterie and the Winged Nike over the main entrance and for numerous parks and public spaces in Denmark the North German Confederation and states of the former German Confederation 3 6 Perhaps his best known work in Europe was a bronze statue of Ajax commissioned in 1878 for the second Christiansborg Palace in Copenhagen It won an Honorable Mention at the art exhibit at the Paris World s Fair of 1878 3 It was destroyed in the 1884 fire which consumed the palace 6 At some point before leaving Denmark for the United States he married his wife Sara American career EditIn 1886 7 Rohl Smith emigrated to the United States and became an American citizen 2 Although the sculptor had used the last name Smith in Denmark he began using the name Rohl Smith in the U S 3 He settled in New York City and worked at the Hecla Iron Works in Brooklyn and then at the Perth Amboy Terra Cotta Company in Perth Amboy New Jersey 7 Between 1886 and 1889 he executed numerous sculptures of famous people in bas relief and busts He also designed a number of larger than life funerary statues and monuments for famous and wealthy individuals in Boston Massachusetts Memphis Tennessee and Louisville Kentucky 6 One of these included the funerary monument to William W Belknap in Arlington National Cemetery near Washington D C 8 Rohl Smith moved to Louisville Kentucky in 1889 3 He executed a funerary monument to Henry A Montgomery a prominent local businessman and politician and founder in 1888 of the New Memphis Jockey Club 3 Montgomery had died during the club s opening In 1890 Rohl Smith was asked to implement Harriet A Ketcham s design for the Iowa Soldiers and Sailors Monument Ketcham s design was chosen by the state legislature in 1888 but she died of a stroke in 1890 Rohl Smith was commissioned to finish the work which was completed in 1896 9 Rohl Smith s most important works prior to 1892 were his Alamo soldier and statue of Judge Reid 6 The Texas Legislature commissioned James Senille Clark a well known manufacturer of stock monuments to erect a memorial to the Battle of the Alamo on the grounds of the state capitol Clark in turn commissioned Rohl Smith in 1891 to sculpt the bronze statue of the soldier atop the monument It is the oldest bronze statue in Texas 10 Rohl Smith s other notable American work at this time was a statue of Kentucky Superior Court Judge Richard Reid 6 11 Franklin statue and rise to fame Edit Electricity Building at the 1893 World s Fair with Rohl Smith s statue of Benjamin Franklin in front of the apse Rohl Smith moved to Chicago in 1891 12 His next important American work came in 1892 6 The commission was for a plaster statue of a young Benjamin Franklin holding a kite for the 1893 World s Columbian Exposition 13 Rohl Smith s prestige was such that he was also named Royal Danish Commissioner to the fair 12 The Franklin statue was widely praised 6 In 1894 it was gifted to the University of Pennysylvania where it stood until it decayed in 1895 14 Around this time Rohl Smith became associated with Peter Emil Dreier a Danish American lawyer and Danish consul in Chicago Dreier s large circle of friends included many prominent painters and sculptors and Rohl Smith s fame began to spread in the artistic community 7 The praise for the Franklin statue caught the attention of Chicago industrialist George Pullman who commissioned Rohl Smith s next great work Pullman s Chicago mansion was built on or near the site of the 1812 Fort Dearborn Massacre in which 28 men 12 children and two women were killed by rogue warriors of the Potawatomi Native American tribe In 1893 Pullman commissioned Rohl Smith to create a memorial to the Fort Dearborn Massacre whose 85th anniversary was approaching 15 After researching the event with his wife Rohl Smith decided that the most important and dramatic part of the narrative was the incident in which a rogue warrior is prevented from killing Margaret Helm and her child by the Potawatomi chief Black Partridge Dr Isaac Van Voorhees lies dying beneath Helm s feet Two members of the Lakota nation Kicking Bear and Short Bull were imprisoned at nearby Fort Sheridan for having fired at United States Army troops during the Wounded Knee Massacre in 1890 Short Bull posed as the less muscular younger warrior attempting to kill Helm while Kicking Bear posed as Black Partridge 16 Pullman donated the sculpture to the city of Chicago 17 Pullman was so pleased with the memorial that in 1895 he commissioned Rohl Smith to sculpt bas relief portraits of his parents for Pullman Memorial Universalist Church in Albion New York 18 From 1891 to 1897 Rohl Smith continued to produce an extensive number of bas reliefs busts and statues of famous people 12 Sherman monument Edit Rohl Smith received his last and perhaps greatest commission in 1895 Renowned American Civil War Major General William Tecumseh Sherman died on February 14 1891 On July 5 1892 Congress enacted legislation authorizing a General William Tecumseh Sherman Monument and establishing the Sherman Memorial Commission 19 In 1895 the Sherman Memorial Commission issued a call for proposals for an equestrian statue of Sherman A committee of the National Sculpture Society agreed to judge the submissions 20 When the competition closed on December 31 1894 23 sculptors had submitted proposals 21 Models of all the proposed statues were exhibited in Washington D C to large crowds The submission by Carl Rohl Smith generated the most popular acclaim 22 The National Sculpture Society NSS narrowed the submissions down to a short list of four 23 The submission by Rohl Smith did not make the short list indeed it was ranked almost dead last by the NSS committee 24 On May 27 the Sherman Memorial Commission overruled the judging committee and chose Rohl Smith s design 23 The National Sculpture Society was outraged and protested the award strongly to the memorial commission and the press 22 The New York Times called the decision one of the most discreditable events ever in the annals of the public art of the United States 25 Senator Edward O Wolcott sponsored legislation to investigate the award process Although his resolution was not successful the Senate debate over the award process was rancorous and showed the Senate s deep distrust of art experts Rohl Smith was accused of using political influence to win the commission an accusation he vehemently denied After two months of protests the National Sculpture Society ceased to contest the award 22 After winning the Sherman Monument commission Rohl Smith moved to Washington D C in 1897 and set up a studio on the White House grounds next to the memorial s location 2 12 A large barn like structure was built on Treasury Place NW With a front door extending 50 feet 15 m high verandas on three sides lean tos in the rear for mixing of plaster tall windows and a tin roof the structure was intended not only to function as a workshop for the construction of a life size model of the Sherman monument but also as living quarters for the Rohl Smiths 26 Carl Rohl Smith never saw his Sherman Monument completed He died in Copenhagen in August 1900 and was buried in Vestre Cemetery Although the government determined that the contract with Rohl Smith was null after his death 27 the memorial commission agreed to allow Rohl Smith s assistant and wife Sara to oversee the statue s completion Mrs Rohl Smith asked sculptors Theo Kitson Bush Brown and Jens Ferdinand Willumsen to help with the statue s completion 28 Later reports do not mention Brown or Willumsen s work on the monument but Lauritz Jensen worked on the main statue 29 while Danish sculptor Stephen Sinding modelled the War and Peace figures Sinding created plaster models for these pieces from Rohl Smith s sketches But upon review the postures and sizes of the two figures were found not to harmonize with the rest of the monument Sigvald Asbjornsen remodelled them 29 As Rohl Smith had already completed three of the four soldier figures on the corners of the monument Sigvald Asbjornsen completed the fourth Sources differ as to whether Asbjornsen completed the artilleryman or the cavalryman 30 Kitson completed the medallions which depicted the corps commanders who served under Sherman 29 Jensen completed the four bas relief panels based on work already completed by Rohl Smith as well as completing the badge eagle of the Army of the Tennessee 31 The design for the stone pedestal was complete at the time of Rohl Smith s death 29 The monument was dedicated by President Theodore Roosevelt on October 15 1903 32 Death EditRohl Smith fell ill with malaria 33 and returned to Europe in June 1896 where he stayed until the fall 34 Although Rohl Smith returned to the United States his ongoing ill health due to another attack of malaria 33 kept him from working on the Sherman statue through October 1898 35 Ill health continued to plague him 36 By March 1900 he had only completed the design for the pedestal which had been erected and three of the four corner sentry figures Only sketches had been made for the equestrian statue itself the side panels the War and Peace statue groups and the medallions 33 Rohl Smith departed Washington for Denmark in July 1900 to escape the city s severe summer heat and humidity 37 In August 1900 Rohl Smith became suddenly ill He died of Bright s disease 38 at St Josef s Hospital in Copenhagen on August 22 1900 with his wife at his side 39 Sara Rohl Smith died in Copenhagen in August 1921 40 Notable works EditBellerophon Danish embassy Rome Italy 1872 Akroterie and Winged Nike Austrian Parliament Building Vienna Austria c 1874 to 1883 Ajax Christiansborg Palace Copenhagen Denmark 1878 now lost Apollo and Diana Pan and Daphne Summer Winter architectural sculpture Eremitage Palace Dyrehaven Denmark 1881 1886 3 Saint Athanasius Saint Irenaeus of Lyon John the Baptist Moses architectural sculpture Marmorkirken The Marble Church Copenhagen Denmark 1883 1884 3 Bacchante Group private collection United States 1885 3 Young Benjamin Franklin With Kite World s Columbian Exposition Chicago Illinois United States 1893 now lost The Fort Dearborn Massacre Monument Chicago History Museum Chicago Illinois United States 1893 Bas relief portraits of Emily Caroline Pullman and James Lewis Pullman Pullman Memorial Universalist Church Albion New York United States 1895 Equestrian Statue of General John M Corse Crapo Park Burlington Iowa 1896 William W Belknap Monument Arlington National Cemetery Arlington County Virginia United States 1897 General William Tecumseh Sherman Monument President s Park Washington D C United States unfinished Gallery Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carl Rohl Smith Saint Athanasius 1883 1884 The Marble Church Copenhagen Denmark Iowa Soldiers and Sailors Monument 1890 94 Des Moines Heroes of the Alamo Monument 1891 Texas State Capitol Austin Young Benjamin Franklin with Kite 1893 World s Columbian Exposition Chicago Illinois United States believed destroyed Fort Dearborn Massacre Monument 1893 Chicago History Museum Chicago Illinois United States General John M Corse 1896 Crapo Park Burlington Iowa Belknap Monument 1897 Arlington National Cemetery Arlington County Virginia United States Sherman Monument 1896 1903 President s Park Washington D C United StatesReferences Edit a b c Carr p 375 a b c d Society of the Army of the Tennessee p 61 Accessed 2012 11 23 a b c d e f g h i j k l Sara Rohl Smith letter to F E Elwell regarding Carl Rohl Smith 1902 Thomas J Watson Library Metropolitan Museum of Art p 2 Accessed 2012 11 23 Goode p 590 a b Art Notes New York Times October 26 1891 a b c d e f g Alison Young E The Franklin Statue Engineering Magazine 2 6 March 1892 p 827 Accessed 2012 11 23 a b c Petersen p 121 Jacob and Remsberg p 161 Stock p 100 Little p 59 Reid was a judge in the Kentucky Superior Court in Mount Sterling Kentucky In April 1884 Judge Reid was severely beaten by local lawyer and church pastor John Jay Cornelison who was outraged by an unfavorable Superior Court decision recently handed down against him Cornelison mistakenly believed Reid to be responsible for the opinion he was not Cornelison beat Reid 25 times in his office with a cane Reid fled into the street where Cornelison administered 75 lashes with a bullwhip Although public opinion held that Judge Reid should defend his honor and either duel with or attack Cornelison in turn Judge Reid demanded that the law take its course Reid was roundly condemned as a coward He took his own life a month later See generally Klotter Kentucky Justice Southern Honor and American Manhood a b c d Sara Rohl Smith letter to F E Elwell regarding Carl Rohl Smith 1902 Thomas J Watson Library Metropolitan Museum of Art p 3 Accessed 2012 11 23 The Plaster Lighting Catcher of the 1893 World s Fair Carl Rohl Smith s Benjamin Franklin statue Part 1 Chicagos 1893 Worlds Fair 2022 09 03 Retrieved 2022 09 12 The Plaster Lighting Catcher of the 1893 World s Fair Carl Rohl Smith s Benjamin Franklin statue Part 2 Chicagos 1893 Worlds Fair 2022 09 04 Retrieved 2022 09 12 Rand McNally amp Co s Handy Guide to Chicago and World s Columbian Exposition p 132 Accessed 2012 11 23 Kirkland p 210 211 Accessed 2012 11 23 Fort Dearborn Massacre New York Times June 2 1893 Album of Genealogy and Biography Cook County Illinois p 233 Accessed 2012 11 23 Dodge p 233 Accessed 2012 11 15 Jacob and Remsberg p 92 Monument to Gen Sherman New York Times January 2 1896 a b c Jacob and Remsberg p 93 a b Gen Sherman Monument New York Times May 28 1896 Jacob and Remsberg p 92 93 The Sherman Statue New York Times May 30 1896 Home for Sherman Model Washington Post October 8 1897 Death Ended the Contract Washington Post February 10 1901 To Finish Sherman Statue Washington Post March 15 1901 Will Aid on Sherman Statue Washington Post May 18 1901 a b c d Sherman Group Cast Washington Post June 7 1903 General William Tecumseh Sherman Monument sculpture SIRIS Keim Rohl Smith and Griffin p 30 Accessed 2012 11 16 Sherman Unveiled Washington Post October 16 1903 a b c Working On A Statue Washington Post March 6 1900 Sculpture Society s Position New York Times July 9 1896 Sherman Statue Exhibit New York Times February 1 1897 National Capital Topics New York Times October 2 1898 It is possible that he fell ill for an extended period a third time between 1898 and March 1900 See Defends Dead Artist Washington Post September 13 1900 Studios Now Empty Washington Post July 22 1900 Renal failure is an uncommon side effect of malaria Death of Carl Rohl Smith Washington Post August 23 1900 Carl Rohl Smith Dies New York Times August 23 1900 Mrs Sarah Rohl Smith New York Times August 18 1921 Bibliography EditAlbum of Genealogy and Biograyhy Cook County Illinois Chicago Calumet Book amp Engraving Co 1898 Carr Carolyn Kinder Revisiting the White City American Art at the 1893 World s Fair Washington D C National Portrait Gallery 1993 Dodge Grenville Mellen Personal Recollections of President Abraham Lincoln General Ulysses S Grant and General William T Sherman Council Bluffs Iowa The Monarch Printing Company 1914 Goode James M The Outdoor Sculpture of Washington D C A Comprehensive Historical Guide Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press 1974 Huang Nian Sheng Benjamin Franklin in American Thought and Culture 1790 1990 Philadelphia American Philosophical Society 1994 Jacob Kathryn Allamong and Remsberg Edwin Harlan Testament to Union Civil War Monuments in Washington D C Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press 1998 Keim De B Randolph Rohl Smith Carl Vilhelm Daniel and Griffin Appleton P C Sherman A Memorial in Art Oratory and Literature by the Society of the Army of Tennessee With the Aid of the Congress of the United States of America Washington D C Government Printing Office 1904 Kirkland Joseph The Chicago Massacre of 1812 With Illustrations and Historical Documents Chicago Dibble Publishing 1893 Klotter James C Kentucky Justice Southern Honor and American Manhood Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 2006 Little Carol Morris A Comprehensive Guide to Outdoor Sculpture in Texas Austin Tex University of Texas Press 1996 Petersen Peter L The Danes in America Atlanta Atlanta Book Company 1980 Rand McNally amp Co s Handy Guide to Chicago and World s Columbian Exposition Chicago Rand McNally amp Co 1893 Society of the Army of the Tennessee Report of the Proceedings of the Society of the Army of the Tennessee at the Thirty Fourth Meeting Held at Washington D C Cincinnati F W Freeman 1906 Stock Janice Beck Amazing Iowa Nashville Tenn Rutledge Hill Press 2003 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carl Rohl Smith amp oldid 1109957357, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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