Posts tagged 1840s

Posts tagged 1840s
The New York Knickerbockers Baseball Club, clockwise from top left: Alfred Cartwright, Alexander Cartwright, William Wheaton, Henry Tiebout Anthony, Daniel “Doc” Adams, and Duncan Curry, ca. 1847.
What splendid looking fellows!
Epic hats! This is what baseball is missing today!
(via fuckyeahvictorians)
ca. 1848, [daguerreotype portrait of a gentleman with a top hat and cigar]
via I Photo Central
One of the best white tophats I have EVER seen!
Richard Caton Woodville
War News from Mexico 1848
Oil on canvas 27 x 24 in
Manoogian Collection, Grand Rapids, MichiganExhibited at the American Art-Union in 1849 and distributed nationwide in an 1851 engraving, War News from Mexico attracted notice because of its lively depiction of the home front at a time of national crisis. It portrays a sampling of the electorate gobbling up the latest news from a daily paper, which dominates the composition and serves as its focal point.
Radiating outward from the newspaper are eleven figures and the bottom half of an eagle, all gathered under or beside the portico of a combined tavern, inn, and post office identified, with heavy-handed significance, as the “American Hotel” (hence the eagle). With wide eyes, gaping mouth, and exaggerated body language, the man at center stage reads aloud from the newspaper clutched in his fists. It reports on the latest happenings in the Mexican War (1846-8), which cost the lives of thousands of soldiers on both sides and resulted in the addition to the United States of 500,000 square miles of conquered territory in the West. The supporting players mug and gesticulate their reactions: one figure, in the shadowy background, throws up his hand; another grasps the frame of his eyeglasses; a third raps his knuckles against one of the portico’s pilasters; a fourth, who relays the news to an old gentleman with hearing difficulties, points a thumb emphatically toward the newspaper.
Despite the obviousness of these gestures, it’s not altogether evident whether the news is good or bad for the denizens of the American Hotel. Clearly, though, they’re all personally involved in what they are hearing, and that includes the humble black man and his little girl in rags; the outcome of the war had a direct bearing on how far west Congress would permit slavery to extend. Those opposed to slavery also opposed the war. The black family is situated at the periphery: they are not part of the consensus, and although they have a personal stake in the war, they have no democratic say in it. A white woman, squeezed to the side of the canvas and visible in the window, is similarly characterized as marginal to the sphere of public discourse, which Woodville shows to be populated exclusively by adult white men. Yet she, unlike the two African Americans, occupies a place securely within, rather than outside, the national hotel.
In Woodville’s day, the elderly gentleman in old-fashioned knee breeches would have been understood as a member of the Revolutionary-era generation. His presence in the scene lends legitimacy to the current military conflict, suggesting that the war that started in 1846 embodied the ideals behind the war declared in 1776. But to the extent that the old man wears a grim or confused expression, the painting implies that ’46 is not indisputably the moral successor to ’76, and that the values of the present do not necessarily accord with those of the past.
—Angela L. Miller, et al., American Encounters: Art, History, and Cultural Identity (2008)
What a fine collection of hats!
This is the first photographed woman ever, Dorothy Catherine Draper. Picture by her brother John William Draper, 1840
Stunning!
A lady and gentleman lounge in fine historical costumes in this 1842 fashion plate from Le Petit Courrier des Dames.
I love the juxtaposition of the guy in regular 1840s clothes chatting with the people in crazy costumes!

Grey, W. Angelo British (19th century) La Rose de Foyle 1844
Mount Holyoke
This is so, so lovely!
1840s bonnet via The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Cap ca. 1840 via The Los Angeles County Museum of Art
*whimper…*
‘The Wheel of Fashion’ by JJ Grandville
IN: ‘Un Autre Monde: Transformations, Visions … et Autre Choses’, 1844.
This is one of the best things I’ve ever seen on Tumblr…
postcard
cardstock
3.5 in HIGH x 5.5 in WIDE
2009.0.53(via OMCA COLLECTIONS)
“Handwritten on back, “Bonnets about 150 years old- in 1958…”
Well, they are a little off on the date. That would make these bonnets from 1808, which they certainly aren’t. These bonnets are probably from the 1840s, based on the shape. I especially like the interior gathering on the top bonnet!
Evening Bonnet, 1847, The Met.
What a gorgeous, lush color and excellent use of fabric! That is a really creative trimming job!

Men’s hat, 1840’s
LOVE!
It’s back to school time! This brown silk bonnet was worn back in the 1840s by a young girl attending the Moravian school (now Salem Academy) in what it now Winston-Salem, NC. The bonnet is typical of 1840s styling, with a small crown at the back and a wide, rounded front brim extending beyond the face. The silk is gathered over concentric rings of wire or cane, giving it structure. The ruffled silk bavolet (back skirt) ensures protection from the sun. Both women and girls would have worn a bonnet like this. HT 4211
Jan Hiester’s, our curator of textiles, research shows that it would have been worn by Frances Caldwell Higgins of Newberry, SC when she was attending the Moravian school 1849-51. Girls from all over the southeast, and not just Moravians, were sent to this Moravian school noted for its excellent academic education. In 1772, Moravian sister Elisabeth Oesterlein opened a “school for little girls” at a time when few girls in the South received a formal education. Within two decades, its reputation had spread and by the early 1800s they were accepting boarding students.
TEXTILE TUESDAYS: Each Tuesday we post a piece from our textile collection. Some items have been on exhibit, some will eventually be shown in our new Historic Textiles Gallery and some may be just too fragile to display. We hope you enjoy our selection each week – do let us know if there’s something in particular you’d like to see on TEXTILE TUESDAY! #TextileTuesday
Thanks for the back-view Charleston Museum! Nice to see the folded fabric- I think it looks lovely!
Mary Bennet Campbell by Charles Fraser, 1845.
Gibbes Museum of Art, Charleston S.C.
I love this portrait. It is so sweet.
Bonnet ca. 1845 via The Los Angeles County Museum of Art
I actually made a little whimpering noise when I saw this! That color!
(via amazinglace)