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Francis Bicknell Carpenter

Francis Bicknell Carpenter (August 6, 1830 – May 23, 1900) was an American painter born in Homer, New York. Carpenter is best known for his painting First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln, which is hanging in the United States Capitol. Carpenter resided with President Lincoln at the White House and in 1866 published his one-volume memoir Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln.[1] Carpenter was a descendant of the New England Rehoboth Carpenter family.[2]

Francis Bicknell Carpenter
Francis Bicknell Carpenter Daguerreotype
Born(1830-08-06)August 6, 1830
DiedMay 23, 1900(1900-05-23) (aged 69)
NationalityAmerican
EducationSanford Thayer
Known forPainting
Notable work1852 to 1896 Presidential portraits & other notables

Family Edit

Carpenter was born to Asaph Harmon[3] and Almira Clark (1801-1885). He was one of nine children.[2]

On January 6, 1853, Francis married Augusta Herrick Prentiss (1831-1926). Francis and Augusta had the following children:

  • Florence Trumbell Carpenter was born on March 10, 1854, in Homer, Cortland County, NY. She died on December 30, 1899. She is number 6550 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 645. Florence married Albert Chester Ives on May 12, 1877, in New York. Albert was born about 1854 in Buffalo, NY.[2]
  • Herbert Sanford Carpenter was born on May 22, 1862, in Homer, Cortland, NY. He is number 6551 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 645. Family on page 654 (# 1478). Herbert married Cora Anderson on February 13, 1894, in NY.[2] Cora was born in Louisville, KY in 1863. She was active in the women's suffrage movement, marching in NYC suffrage demonstrations as a flagbearer from 1913-1917.[4] Herbert died in 1926; Cora lived until 1960.[5]

Education Edit

In 1844, after showing his father a painting of his mother that the former viewed as a success, Carpenter was allowed to go to Syracuse, New York, for six months to study under Sanford Thayer. In 1848, at age 18, he was awarded a purchase prize by the American Art-Union. By the age of twenty-one, Carpenter established a studio in New York City.[6] Carpenter was elected to the National Academy of Design as an associate member in 1852.

Early career Edit

In 1852, Carpenter was commissioned to paint a portrait of President Millard Fillmore, a fellow upstate New Yorker born in Cayuga County. Commissions followed for portraits of Presidents Franklin Pierce and John Tyler, and other mid-19th century notables, including the clergyman Henry Ward Beecher; newspaper editor Horace Greeley; Ezra Cornell, founder of Cornell University; James Russell Lowell, poet; and John C. Frémont, the first Republican presidential candidate.[6]

First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln Edit

 Edwin Stanton (Secretary of War)Salmon Chase (Secretary of the Treasury)President LincolnGideon Welles (Secretary of the Navy)William Seward (Secretary of State)Caleb B. Smith (Secretary of the Interior)Montgomery Blair (Postmaster General)Edward Bates (Attorney General)Emancipation Proclamation draftUnknown Paintinguse cursor to explore or button to enlarge
First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln by Francis Bicknell Carpenter[7]
(People in the image are clickable.)

According to his memoir, Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln,[8][9] Carpenter was deeply moved by Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, calling it "an act unparalleled for moral grandeur in the history of mankind."[10] Carpenter felt "an intense desire to do something expressive of appreciation of the great issues involved in the war."[11] Carpenter, having formulated his idea for the subject of the painting and outlined its composition, fortuitously met Frederick A. Lane, a friend who recently had earned a large amount of money. Bankrolled by Lane, and through the influence of Samuel Sinclair of the New York Tribune and Representative Schuyler Colfax of Indiana, Carpenter gained Lincoln's assent to travel to Washington and work with him on the painting. Carpenter met with the President on February 6, 1864, and then began work.

Carpenter began with many sketches of Cabinet members and of Lincoln himself, working from life, as Lincoln worked, and from photographs taken by Mathew Brady of Lincoln and members of his Cabinet. Carpenter was given free access to Lincoln's White House office for the former purpose, and the State Dining Room was given him for a studio.[1] On July 12, 1864, Lincoln led his cabinet into the State Dining Room to view the completed work.[6]

When Lincoln had the painting exhibited to the public in the East Room of the White House, Carpenter noted that the exhibition was thronged with visitors. Carpenter campaigned for Congress to purchase the painting, enlisting the help of fellow Homer native William O. Stoddard, Lincoln's private secretary. Congress did not appropriate the money. The painting remained in Carpenter's possession until 1877, when he arranged for Elizabeth Thompson to purchase it for $25,000 and donate it to Congress. A joint session of Congress was held in 1878, on Lincoln's birthday, to serve as a reception for the painting, with the artist present.[6]

Later career and death Edit

Following Lincoln's assassination, Carpenter produced many portraits of Lincoln and his family; some based on memory, others on photographs provided by Lincoln's widow. Carpenter's skills were in decline by this time. One admirer of Carpenter's early work even wondered if a later portrait of Lincoln was a forgery.

Among the notable portraits painted by Carpenter, aside from Lincoln, were those of President Fillmore and Governor Myron H. Clarke, painted in the New York City Hall; Horace Greeley (a portrait owned by the Tribune Association); Asa Packer, founder of Lehigh University; James Russell Lowell; New York banker David Leavitt; Dr. Lyman Beecher; Henry Ward Beecher and others.[12]

By the late 1870s, Carpenter became increasingly interested in religion and spirituality; art historian Mary Bartlett Cowdrey believed "that religious obsession somehow undermined Carpenter's work". Carpenter died in New York City—a brief obituary appearing in The New York Times misstated the title of his most famous work.[2]

Carpenter died of "dropsy" an old-fashioned term for edema[13] on May 23, 1900, in New York and was buried in Glenwood Cemetery, Homer, Cortland County, New York.[2]

Criticism and later exhibitions of Carpenter's work Edit

Carpenter's legacy has been decidedly mixed, according to a retrospective of Carpenter's career written for the American Art Journal. Cowdrey attempted a full-scale biography that might have helped his reputation, but became frustrated by lack of interest on the part of Carpenter's family. Contemporary critic Henry T. Tuckerman acknowledged Carpenter's "facility in capturing a likeness" but "criticized the artist's lack of 'grace' and 'vitality'". The United States Senate Catalogue of Fine Art observes that First Reading, as it hangs today in the Capitol, contains a much weaker portrait of Lincoln than the engraving made from it. This is due to Carpenter's obsessive tinkering with the original painting while he had it in his possession.

In 2006, an exhibition of portraits by Carpenter was shown at the Center for the Arts[14] in Homer, New York. Portraits by Carpenter of several figures of local historical interest were exhibited. Loans of the works were obtained from community members, the Phillips Free Library[15] in Homer, and the Homer Central School District.

Portrait of Mary Lincoln Edit

 
First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln, photographed by Mathew Brady. Compare to the forged portrait here.

On February 12, 1929, The New York Times reported the discovery of a new painting of Mary Lincoln. It reported that this painting was by Francis Bicknell Carpenter. This painting was reproduced in different biographies and books such as Mary Lincoln: Wife and Widow by Carl Sandburg, printed in 1932.

The owner, Ludwig Pflum (aka Lew Bloom), sold it through the Milch Galleries in New York. It was acquired by Jessie Harlan Lincoln, the President's and Mary Lincoln's granddaughter. There is no record of what the painting sold for.[16] Pflum, a former vaudeville performer who dabbled in painting on the side, as Lew Bloom, claimed the painting of Mary Lincoln had not yet been presented and done in secret at the bequest of Mrs. Lincoln by the painter Francis Carpenter. After the assassination of President Lincoln, Bloom claimed Mrs. Lincoln refused it and the painting was sold to a Philadelphia shipbuilder, Jacob G. Neafi. Bloom also claimed that after the death of Mrs. Neafie, Mr. Neafie gave the painting to Susan Bloom for her kindness and caring for Mrs. Neafie through her long illness.[16] Bloom went on to claim that he inherited the painting from his sister after her death in 1910. As it turns out, Susan Bloom was five years old when Mrs. Neafie died in 1860.[16]

This painting remained in the Lincoln family until 1976, later estimated at a value of about $400,000 US dollars, when it was given to the Illinois State Historical Library, now named the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. During a 2011 restoration by art conservator Barry Bauman, it was found to be a forgery.[16] The forgery overpainted an original oil portrait of an unknown woman, painted circa the 1860s, that was modified by painting out a crucifix, adding an Abraham Lincoln brooch with other adjustments such as forging Francis Bicknell Carpenter's signature.[16] Bauman is quoted to say, "Not only is it not Mary Lincoln, it's not Francis Carpenter."[16][17]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b U.S. Senate Art & History site retrieved 2008
  2. ^ a b c d e f A Genealogical History of the Rehoboth Branch of the Carpenter Family in America. Also known as the Carpenter Memorial. Author: Amos Bugbee Carpenter (1818–1904). Published 1898 By: Press of Carpenter & Morehouse, Amherst, MA. His family is listed on page 460 (# 664). His Carpenter ancestors come from Rehoboth, MA and his immigrant ancestor was William Carpenter (born 1605 England – died February 7, 1658/1659 MA).
  3. ^ Asaph Harmon in the Carpenter Memorial but Asaph Hammam in the family bible record
  4. ^ Scherer, Carlin (March 13, 1971). ""Lady—and Patriot" [letter to editor]". Boston Globe. Retrieved July 10, 2020.
  5. ^ "Mrs. H.S. Carpenter". New York Times. October 5, 1960. Retrieved July 10, 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d A Genealogical History of the Rehoboth Branch of the Carpenter Family in America. Also known as the Carpenter Memorial
  7. ^ "Art & History: First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation by President Lincoln". U.S. Senate. Retrieved August 2, 2013. Lincoln met with his cabinet on July 22, 1862, for the first reading of a draft of the Emancipation Proclamation.
  8. ^ Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln: The Story of a Picture, New York: Hurd and Houghton (1866); also published as The Inner Life of Abraham Lincoln: Six Months at the White House, New York: Hurd and Houghton (1867).
  9. ^ According to Harold Holzer, "The Inner Life of Abraham Lincoln ... was actually nothing more than a presumptuously re-titled edition of Six Months at the White House (its text unchanged)." "Lincoln Through the Eyes of History," Lincoln Lore
  10. ^ Carpenter, pp. 10-11.
  11. ^ Carpenter, p. 12.
  12. ^ Waters, Clara Erskine Clement; Hutton, Laurence (2008-04-07). Artists of the Nineteenth Century and Their Works, Vol. I, Clara Erskine Clement Waters, Laurence Hutton, Houghton, Osgood & Company, Boston, 1879. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  13. ^ See: Dictionary of American Biography, Vol. 2, by A. Johnson, page 510. Copyright 1995 by Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.
  14. ^ Center for the Arts
  15. ^ "Phillips Free Library - Homer, New York". Library.public-libraries.org. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Bauman, Barry. (2012) Case Study: The Demise of Mary Lincoln: An Artistic Conspiracy. [1] Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum Collection file LR 938.
  17. ^ This quote is drawn from Barry Bauman's Case Study: The Demise of Mary Lincoln: An Artistic Conspiracy. Cohen, Patricia (2012-02-11). "Mrs. Lincoln, I Presume? Well, as It Turns Out ..." The New York Times at NYTimes.com. Retrieved 2012-02-14. See portrait here.

External links Edit

  • Works by or about Francis Bicknell Carpenter at Internet Archive
  • contains a picture of him

francis, bicknell, carpenter, other, people, named, francis, carpenter, francis, carpenter, disambiguation, august, 1830, 1900, american, painter, born, homer, york, carpenter, best, known, painting, first, reading, emancipation, proclamation, president, linco. For other people named Francis Carpenter see Francis Carpenter disambiguation Francis Bicknell Carpenter August 6 1830 May 23 1900 was an American painter born in Homer New York Carpenter is best known for his painting First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln which is hanging in the United States Capitol Carpenter resided with President Lincoln at the White House and in 1866 published his one volume memoir Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln 1 Carpenter was a descendant of the New England Rehoboth Carpenter family 2 Francis Bicknell CarpenterFrancis Bicknell Carpenter DaguerreotypeBorn 1830 08 06 August 6 1830Homer Cortland County New YorkDiedMay 23 1900 1900 05 23 aged 69 NationalityAmericanEducationSanford ThayerKnown forPaintingNotable work1852 to 1896 Presidential portraits amp other notables Contents 1 Family 2 Education 3 Early career 4 First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln 5 Later career and death 6 Criticism and later exhibitions of Carpenter s work 7 Portrait of Mary Lincoln 8 References 9 External linksFamily EditCarpenter was born to Asaph Harmon 3 and Almira Clark 1801 1885 He was one of nine children 2 On January 6 1853 Francis married Augusta Herrick Prentiss 1831 1926 Francis and Augusta had the following children Florence Trumbell Carpenter was born on March 10 1854 in Homer Cortland County NY She died on December 30 1899 She is number 6550 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 645 Florence married Albert Chester Ives on May 12 1877 in New York Albert was born about 1854 in Buffalo NY 2 Herbert Sanford Carpenter was born on May 22 1862 in Homer Cortland NY He is number 6551 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 645 Family on page 654 1478 Herbert married Cora Anderson on February 13 1894 in NY 2 Cora was born in Louisville KY in 1863 She was active in the women s suffrage movement marching in NYC suffrage demonstrations as a flagbearer from 1913 1917 4 Herbert died in 1926 Cora lived until 1960 5 Education EditIn 1844 after showing his father a painting of his mother that the former viewed as a success Carpenter was allowed to go to Syracuse New York for six months to study under Sanford Thayer In 1848 at age 18 he was awarded a purchase prize by the American Art Union By the age of twenty one Carpenter established a studio in New York City 6 Carpenter was elected to the National Academy of Design as an associate member in 1852 Early career EditIn 1852 Carpenter was commissioned to paint a portrait of President Millard Fillmore a fellow upstate New Yorker born in Cayuga County Commissions followed for portraits of Presidents Franklin Pierce and John Tyler and other mid 19th century notables including the clergyman Henry Ward Beecher newspaper editor Horace Greeley Ezra Cornell founder of Cornell University James Russell Lowell poet and John C Fremont the first Republican presidential candidate 6 First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln EditMain article First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln nbsp First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln by Francis Bicknell Carpenter 7 People in the image are clickable According to his memoir Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln 8 9 Carpenter was deeply moved by Abraham Lincoln s Emancipation Proclamation calling it an act unparalleled for moral grandeur in the history of mankind 10 Carpenter felt an intense desire to do something expressive of appreciation of the great issues involved in the war 11 Carpenter having formulated his idea for the subject of the painting and outlined its composition fortuitously met Frederick A Lane a friend who recently had earned a large amount of money Bankrolled by Lane and through the influence of Samuel Sinclair of the New York Tribune and Representative Schuyler Colfax of Indiana Carpenter gained Lincoln s assent to travel to Washington and work with him on the painting Carpenter met with the President on February 6 1864 and then began work Carpenter began with many sketches of Cabinet members and of Lincoln himself working from life as Lincoln worked and from photographs taken by Mathew Brady of Lincoln and members of his Cabinet Carpenter was given free access to Lincoln s White House office for the former purpose and the State Dining Room was given him for a studio 1 On July 12 1864 Lincoln led his cabinet into the State Dining Room to view the completed work 6 When Lincoln had the painting exhibited to the public in the East Room of the White House Carpenter noted that the exhibition was thronged with visitors Carpenter campaigned for Congress to purchase the painting enlisting the help of fellow Homer native William O Stoddard Lincoln s private secretary Congress did not appropriate the money The painting remained in Carpenter s possession until 1877 when he arranged for Elizabeth Thompson to purchase it for 25 000 and donate it to Congress A joint session of Congress was held in 1878 on Lincoln s birthday to serve as a reception for the painting with the artist present 6 Later career and death EditFollowing Lincoln s assassination Carpenter produced many portraits of Lincoln and his family some based on memory others on photographs provided by Lincoln s widow Carpenter s skills were in decline by this time One admirer of Carpenter s early work even wondered if a later portrait of Lincoln was a forgery Among the notable portraits painted by Carpenter aside from Lincoln were those of President Fillmore and Governor Myron H Clarke painted in the New York City Hall Horace Greeley a portrait owned by the Tribune Association Asa Packer founder of Lehigh University James Russell Lowell New York banker David Leavitt Dr Lyman Beecher Henry Ward Beecher and others 12 By the late 1870s Carpenter became increasingly interested in religion and spirituality art historian Mary Bartlett Cowdrey believed that religious obsession somehow undermined Carpenter s work Carpenter died in New York City a brief obituary appearing in The New York Times misstated the title of his most famous work 2 Carpenter died of dropsy an old fashioned term for edema 13 on May 23 1900 in New York and was buried in Glenwood Cemetery Homer Cortland County New York 2 Criticism and later exhibitions of Carpenter s work EditCarpenter s legacy has been decidedly mixed according to a retrospective of Carpenter s career written for the American Art Journal Cowdrey attempted a full scale biography that might have helped his reputation but became frustrated by lack of interest on the part of Carpenter s family Contemporary critic Henry T Tuckerman acknowledged Carpenter s facility in capturing a likeness but criticized the artist s lack of grace and vitality The United States Senate Catalogue of Fine Art observes that First Reading as it hangs today in the Capitol contains a much weaker portrait of Lincoln than the engraving made from it This is due to Carpenter s obsessive tinkering with the original painting while he had it in his possession In 2006 an exhibition of portraits by Carpenter was shown at the Center for the Arts 14 in Homer New York Portraits by Carpenter of several figures of local historical interest were exhibited Loans of the works were obtained from community members the Phillips Free Library 15 in Homer and the Homer Central School District Portrait of Mary Lincoln Edit nbsp First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln photographed by Mathew Brady Compare to the forged portrait here On February 12 1929 The New York Times reported the discovery of a new painting of Mary Lincoln It reported that this painting was by Francis Bicknell Carpenter This painting was reproduced in different biographies and books such as Mary Lincoln Wife and Widow by Carl Sandburg printed in 1932 The owner Ludwig Pflum aka Lew Bloom sold it through the Milch Galleries in New York It was acquired by Jessie Harlan Lincoln the President s and Mary Lincoln s granddaughter There is no record of what the painting sold for 16 Pflum a former vaudeville performer who dabbled in painting on the side as Lew Bloom claimed the painting of Mary Lincoln had not yet been presented and done in secret at the bequest of Mrs Lincoln by the painter Francis Carpenter After the assassination of President Lincoln Bloom claimed Mrs Lincoln refused it and the painting was sold to a Philadelphia shipbuilder Jacob G Neafi Bloom also claimed that after the death of Mrs Neafie Mr Neafie gave the painting to Susan Bloom for her kindness and caring for Mrs Neafie through her long illness 16 Bloom went on to claim that he inherited the painting from his sister after her death in 1910 As it turns out Susan Bloom was five years old when Mrs Neafie died in 1860 16 This painting remained in the Lincoln family until 1976 later estimated at a value of about 400 000 US dollars when it was given to the Illinois State Historical Library now named the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum During a 2011 restoration by art conservator Barry Bauman it was found to be a forgery 16 The forgery overpainted an original oil portrait of an unknown woman painted circa the 1860s that was modified by painting out a crucifix adding an Abraham Lincoln brooch with other adjustments such as forging Francis Bicknell Carpenter s signature 16 Bauman is quoted to say Not only is it not Mary Lincoln it s not Francis Carpenter 16 17 References Edit a b U S Senate Art amp History site retrieved 2008 a b c d e f A Genealogical History of the Rehoboth Branch of the Carpenter Family in America Also known as the Carpenter Memorial Author Amos Bugbee Carpenter 1818 1904 Published 1898 By Press of Carpenter amp Morehouse Amherst MA His family is listed on page 460 664 His Carpenter ancestors come from Rehoboth MA and his immigrant ancestor was William Carpenter born 1605 England died February 7 1658 1659 MA Asaph Harmon in the Carpenter Memorial but Asaph Hammam in the family bible record Scherer Carlin March 13 1971 Lady and Patriot letter to editor Boston Globe Retrieved July 10 2020 Mrs H S Carpenter New York Times October 5 1960 Retrieved July 10 2020 a b c d A Genealogical History of the Rehoboth Branch of the Carpenter Family in America Also known as the Carpenter Memorial Art amp History First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation by President Lincoln U S Senate Retrieved August 2 2013 Lincoln met with his cabinet on July 22 1862 for the first reading of a draft of the Emancipation Proclamation Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln The Story of a Picture New York Hurd and Houghton 1866 also published as The Inner Life of Abraham Lincoln Six Months at the White House New York Hurd and Houghton 1867 According to Harold Holzer The Inner Life of Abraham Lincoln was actually nothing more than a presumptuously re titled edition of Six Months at the White House its text unchanged Lincoln Through the Eyes of History Lincoln Lore Carpenter pp 10 11 Carpenter p 12 Waters Clara Erskine Clement Hutton Laurence 2008 04 07 Artists of the Nineteenth Century and Their Works Vol I Clara Erskine Clement Waters Laurence Hutton Houghton Osgood amp Company Boston 1879 Retrieved 2011 05 29 See Dictionary of American Biography Vol 2 by A Johnson page 510 Copyright 1995 by Grolier Electronic Publishing Inc See also Center for the Arts Phillips Free Library Homer New York Library public libraries org Retrieved 2011 05 29 a b c d e f Bauman Barry 2012 Case Study The Demise of Mary Lincoln An Artistic Conspiracy 1 Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum Collection file LR 938 This quote is drawn from Barry Bauman s Case Study The Demise of Mary Lincoln An Artistic Conspiracy Cohen Patricia 2012 02 11 Mrs Lincoln I Presume Well as It Turns Out The New York Times at NYTimes com Retrieved 2012 02 14 See portrait here External links EditWorks by or about Francis Bicknell Carpenter at Internet Archive Picture History Francis Bicknell Carpenter contains a picture of him Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francis Bicknell Carpenter amp oldid 1138603713, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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