Main content

Henry Kirke Brown: The Father of American Sculpture : typescript

Notifications

Held at: University of Delaware Library Special Collections [Contact Us]181 South College Avenue, Newark, DE 19717-5267

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the University of Delaware Library Special Collections. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.

Overview and metadata sections

Henry Kirke Bush-Brown was the son of Caroline Bush (Lydia Brown's sister) and Robert W. Bush, but was adopted when he was very young by his aunt and uncle, Lydia Louise and Henry Kirke Brown, and raised at their Newburgh home. Bush-Brown began his sculptural studies with his uncle, then moved to New York to continue his art education at the National Academy of Design. For many years, Bush-Brown was a successful sculptor of portrait busts and public monuments, probably best known today for his equestrian bronzes of General George Meade (1896), General John F. Reynolds (1898), and General John Sedgwick (1913), all at Gettysburg, and his 1903 equestrian bronze monument of General Anthony Wayne at Valley Forge. He moved to Washington, D.C., in 1910, and remained there until his death in 1935.

“Bush-Brown, Henry Kirke.” American National Biography Online. http://www.anb.org/articles/17/17-00126.html. (accessed December 12, 2008).

Henry Kirke Brown (1814-1886) was an American naturalist sculptor, producing sculptures and monuments in New York and Washnington, D.C.

H. K. Brown was born to farming parents, Elijah Brown and Rhoda Childsnear, in Leyden, Massachusetts, on February 24, 1814. He attended school at the Deerfield Academy until the age of eighteen. While a student at Deerfield, Brown demonstrated an aptitude for painting, and in 1832, he began to study art with successful Boston portrait painter Chester Harding.

In 1836, Brown moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, and spent the next two years (1837-1838) painting portraits while living in an artists colony. During this period, he met Shobal Vail Clevenger, a sculptor who inspired Brown to switch from painting to sculpture. Brown returned to the East coast in 1839 and married Lydia Louise Udall. In 1842, Brown and his wife traveled to Italy, visiting Florence, Naples, and finally Rome, where Brown established a studio to pursue his sculptural studies. After four years in Italy, the Browns returned to the United States in 1846 and settled in New York City.

Following his sojourn in Italy, Brown rejected European neoclassicism, favoring naturalistic art and subjects that reflected American culture and values. When the American Art Union presented him with a commission for several small bronzes to be given as prizes, Brown decided to cast them himself and with the assistance of European bronze workers constructed a bronze foundry in his studio between 1846 and 1849. Thus, Brown was not only instrumental in bringing the techniques of bronze casting to America, he was also one of the first American sculptors to cast his own works in bronze.

In 1851, Brown established himself on the American art scene with his heroic bronze statue of Governor De Witt Clinton in Brooklyn's Greenwich Cemetery. That same year, he was honored by his peers with election to the National Academy of Design in New York. In 1856 he executed one of his most famous works, a bronze equestrian statue of George Washington for New York City's Union Square. During this period, he actively supported the establishment of a federal art commission composed of artists, rather than politicians, to oversee painting and sculpture projects in Washington, D.C. In 1859, President James Buchanan appointed Brown and two other artists to the newly-created National Art Commission. During this time, Brown also undertook a sculptural commission for the state capitol building in Columbia, South Carolina. This project was nearly completed when the Civil War brought work to a halt. The sculptures, still in Brown's workshop in Columbia, were destroyed by Gen. Sherman's troops in 1865.

After the Civil War, Brown received commissions for a number of major sculptural projects in New York and Washington. In 1868, Brown cast a bronze statue of Abraham Lincoln for Union Square in New York, and he executed several statues and monuments for the nation's capital. These include statues of Nathanael Greene (1870), George Clinton (1873), Richard Stockton (1874), and Philip Kearny (1886) for National Statuary Hall in the Capitol building; an equestrian bronze of General Winfield Scott (1871) in Scott Circle; and an equestrian statue of General Nathanael Greene (1877) for Greene Square.

Following the death of his wife in 1879, Brown's own health began to fail, and he was no longer able to work. He died in 1886 in Newburgh, New York, where he had lived and maintained a studio since 1857.

Craven, Wayne.Sculpture in America.New and revised edition . Newark: University of Delaware; New York and London: Cornwall Books, 1984, pp.144-158.“Brown, Henry Kirke.” American National Biography Online. http://www.anb.org/articles/17/17-00108.html. (accessed May 9, 2007).

Lydia Louise Brown was the eldest daughter of Judge James Udall, prominent member of the Vermont legislature, and Sophia Downer Champlin. Lydia and Henry met in 1836, while he was visiting her family in Hartford, Vermont, and they married on October, 28 1839. Lydia Brown died on December 10, 1879 at their home in Newburgh, New York, after a long illness.

This collection comprises a carbon typescript for an unpublished manuscript titled "Henry Kirke Brown: The Father of American Sculpture," which was compiled, written, and edited by Henry Kirke Bush-Brown, and an abridged version by the same title, also prepared by Bush-Brown. The manuscript contains a description of Henry Kirke Brown's life, transcripts of his correspondence, photographs of his homes and artistic works, poems, sketches, and a genealogical chart of the Brown family. Several original letters, poems, photographs, and art are tipped into the typescript; however, the bulk of the original letters Bush-Brown used for his transcriptions were destroyed in a fire.

This is one of three copies of the manuscript known to exist. The other two sets are located respectively in the Library of Congress (Henry Kirke Bush-Brown Papers) and Smith College (Bush-Brown Family Papers). Wayne Craven, H.F. du Pont Professor Emeritus of Art History, obtained this carbon typescript from Henry Kirke Bush-Brown's son, James, around 1975. At the time, Craven was planning to write a biography of Henry Kirke Brown, and the collection includes several pages of Craven's handwritten notes (F8, F13, F16).

The introduction and the first three chapters of the work offer an account of Brown’s early years. A genealogy of the Brown family is included in this section. The remaining volumes are made up mostly of full transcripts or extracts from Brown's correspondence with relatives, patrons, clients, colleagues, and governmental officials between 1836 and 1882. Correspondents include Chester Harding, William Cullen Bryant, James Buchanan, John Quincy Adams Ward, Shobal Vail Clevenger, Linus Yale, Sr., and others. A significant portion of the correspondence is between Brown and his wife Lydia Louise Brown. The Browns maintained a steady, frequent correspondence throughout their marriage. Even when together, as during their four-year stay in Italy, both of them wrote often to relatives and friends, providing an intimate, almost continuous narrative of their lives.

A few original handwritten letters are interspersed among the pages of the typescript manuscript, and in many cases, Bush-Brown included comments on the letters. Most of the letters are organized in chronological order and reflect significant periods of the artist’s life and career. Several chapters have overlapping dates, particularly those covering the years 1855-1862. Bush-Brown excerpted portions of his uncle's diary and illustrated the volumes with photographs of Brown's works. Many of the images are photoreproductions of Brown's sketches and studies, with a small number of original prints or drawings. The abridged version of the manuscript (F24-F29) includes information from chapters I-V, VII, X and XI, but contains only one illustration.

The dates of the letters span more than forty years, from around 1839 to 1882. They document private relations, domestic life, international travel, social change, and major cultural and political events such as the American Civil War and Reconstruction in the United States. This collection not only provides information about the life and career of the artist Henry Kirke Brown, it also offers a first-hand view of an important period in the cultural, social, and political history of the United States.

  1. Box 1: Shelved in SPEC MSS record center cartons
  2. Box 2: Shelved in SPEC MSS manuscript boxes

Gift of Wayne Craven, 1999.

Processed by Marina Dobronovskaya, February 2007. Revised and encoded by Teresa K. Nevins, December 2008.

Publisher
University of Delaware Library Special Collections
Finding Aid Author
University of Delaware Library, Special Collections
Finding Aid Date
2007 April 25
Access Restrictions

The collection is open for research.

Use Restrictions

Use of materials from this collection beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce isrequired from the copyright holder. Please contact Special Collections Department, University of Delaware Library, https://library.udel.edu/static/purl.php?askspec

Collection Inventory

Physical Description

pp. 1-32

p 1. Photograph of Henry Kirke Brown by Matthew Brady (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F1
p. 28 a. Portrait of Rhoda Brown, 1845 (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F1
Physical Description

pp. 33-46

p. 33a. Photographs of H.K. Brown parents' house (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F2
p. 35a. Portrait of Elijah Brown, father, 1855 (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F2
p. 35b. Elijah Brown on his death-bed, 1855 (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F2
p. 35c. Portrait of Jerusha Alexander, aunt (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F2
Physical Description

pp. 47-148f

p. 83. Portrait of Adoline Udall (Mrs. Owen Taft) by Albert Hoit (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F3
p. 143b. Portrait of Mrs. James Udall, 1839 (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F3
p. 143c. Henry, Caroline, and Edward Udall, 1839 (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F3
p. 143d. Sketch painting of Sofia Udall, 1838-1839 (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F3
p. 143e. Homestead of Hon. James Udall, Quechee, Windsor, VT (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F3
p. 149. "Lines to my Mother," original handwritten poem by H.K. Brown.
Box 1 Folder F3
Physical Description

pp. 149-297

pp. 154a-b. Photograph of Albert Hoit bust by H.K. Brown (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F4
p. 183. handwritten poem (writer unknown).
Box 1 Folder F4
After p. 297. Handwritten poems: "Faith," "To Elizabeth," and "To Miss" by Alfred B. Sweet, 1841.
Box 1 Folder F4
Physical Description

pp. 298-401c

pp. 401b-c. Drawing from the Antique (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F5
p. 408. Photograph of Graze by H.K. Brown (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F5
Physical Description

pp. 402-548

pp. 415a-h. Drawings and photographs of Summer, Autumn, Winter, Spring by H.K. Brown (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F6
p. 435a. Drawing of David (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F6
p. 454a. Drawing by H.K. Brown (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F6
pp. 454c-e. Prints made by H.K. Bush-Brown from copper plates engraved by H.K. Brown.
Box 1 Folder F6
p. 489a. Drawing of Ruth (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F6
p. 511a. Pencil drawing of H.K. Brown by George Baker, 1845, and sketch from the Antique by H.K. Brown (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F6
p. 535. Handwritten poem, "To Henry on Seeing His Statue of David Triumphant," by Lydia Brown, 1844.
Box 1 Folder F6
p. 540. Handwritten "Sonetto" by Luigi Peretti addressed to H.K. Brown, 1846.
Box 1 Folder F6
Physical Description

pp. 548+-548/77

p. 548/48a. Crayon portrait of Mr. Brown, by Seth Cheney (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F7
p. 548/48b. Crayon portrait of Mrs. Brown, by Seth Cheney (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F7
p. 548/76a. Indians playing La Crosse, by H.K. Brown, 1853 (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F7
p. 548/76b. Me Sannacuado, Chief of Baydinoch, by H.K. Brown, 1848 (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F7
p. 548/76c. Photographs of busts, after 1861.
Box 1 Folder F7
Physical Description

pp. 549-601b

One page of handwritten notes by Wayne Craven.
Box 1 Folder F8
p. 595a. Photograph of The Choosing of the Arrow, bronze, made for the Art Union. Drawing by H.K. Brown (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F8
p. 598a. Drawing for a monument, by H.K. Brown (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F8
p. 598b. Photograph of W.C. Bryant bust, marble (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F8
p. 601a. Photographs of a small model of Washington statue (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F8
p. 601b. Photographs of a small model of Washington statue (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F8
Physical Description

pp. 602-667

p. 637a. Portrait drawing (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F9
p. 637b. Portrait of Caroline C. Brown by H.K. Brown (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F9
p. 654a. Handwritten poem, "God's Perpetual Inspiration" by James Richardson, Jr.
Box 1 Folder F9
pp. 665d-f. Monument of Gen. Clinton in Greenwood Cemetery, Brooklyn (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F9
Physical Description

pp. 668-796

pp. 764a, b, c, d. H.K. Brown's house "Little Brook".
Box 1 Folder F10
Physical Description

pp. 797-841g

p. 797a. Portrait drawing (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F11
p. 817+. Photograph of a lamp (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F11
pp. 832f-832i. Design for Pediment for U.S. Capitol (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F11
p. 841 b-e. Handwritten poems "The Uses of Life," "A Spot Revisited," "God's Quiet" and "Slavery," by Cary Spencer.
Box 1 Folder F11
Physical Description

pp. 842-926e

pp. 857o-u. Photographs of Washington's statue.
Box 1 Folder F12
p. 908a. Portrait of H.K. Brown by Louis Long.
Box 1 Folder F12
pp. 908b-c. Photographs of Indian and Panther, by H.K. Brown.
Box 1 Folder F12
p. 926a. Handwritten poem "Now We Learn".
Box 1 Folder F12
Physical Description

pp. 927-1049

Nine pages of handwritten notes by Wayne Craven.
Box 1 Folder F13
Handwritten note to H.K. Brown regarding art commission appropriation, 1862.
Box 1 Folder F13
Between pp. 961-962. Handwritten letter signed "Love, Henry" on back of meeting minutes.
Box 1 Folder F13
p. 1042a. Photograph of Gen. Scott's bust, 1858 (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F13
Chapter VIII (2 of 3), United States Art Commission, February 5, 1858 to June 1862, 1859-1862.
Box 1 Folder F14
Physical Description

pp. 1056-1153

Physical Description

pp. 1154-1266d

pp.1266b-d. Photographs of H.K. Brown (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F15
Physical Description

pp. 1267-1374

Three pages of handwritten notes by Wayne Craven.
Box 1 Folder F16
Physical Description

pp. 1375-1539

p.1513a. Drawing (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F17
Chapter X (2 of 2), The War, September 1861 to July 1862, 1862.
Box 1 Folder F18
Physical Description

pp. 1540-1622

Physical Description

pp. 1623-1799

Between pp. 1652-1653. Three letters dated May, June, August 1863 to H.K. Brown regarding pedestal design.
Box 1 Folder F19
p. 1684a. Photograph of the sculpture. Trinity Church, New York (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F19
p. 1692a. Design for R. Fulton Monument (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F19
p. 1732a. Photograph of Dr. Bethune statue (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F19
p. 1748+1. Photograph of a fragment of mantel (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F19
p. 1760+. Photograph of Col. Hawkins bust (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F19
Physical Description

pp. 1800-1926

pp. 1856b-e, 1910, 1920+. Photographs of Lincoln statues.
Box 1 Folder F20
After p. 1926. Meeting notes and statement of intentions for advancement of art in the United States.
Box 1 Folder F20
Physical Description

pp. 1927-1993

pp. 1931+2, 1931+3. Photographs of Gen. Green statue (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F21
pp. 1941a-b. Drawings.
Box 1 Folder F21
pp. 1941c-d. Photographs of statues of horses (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F21
p. 1967a. Photographs of Gen. Scott statue (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F21
p. 1985c. Painting by H.K. Brown (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F21
after p. 1993. Letter dated August 3, 1873, from H.K. Brown to Gordon.
Box 1 Folder F21
Physical Description

pp. 1993a-2070

p. 2008a. Photographs of Gen. Clinton statue (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F22
Physical Description

pp. 2071-2140a

p. 2103d. Photograph of Indian breaking a wild horse (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F23
p. 2104a. Photographs of R. Stockton statue (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F23
p. 2104b-d. Photograph of H.K. Brown in a costume made for R. Stockton statue (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F23
p. 2117. Letter from H.K. Brown to Lydia Brown with pen drawing, and pencil drawing after the pen sketch.
Box 1 Folder F23
p. 2141. Photographs of a child bust (photoreproduction).
Box 1 Folder F23
p. 2142. Photographs of Mr. and Mrs. Brown.
Box 1 Folder F23
p. 2144. Photograph of a horse.
Box 1 Folder F23
History of horse, "Virginia Dare," written by Lydia Brown.
Box 1 Folder F23

Physical Description

pp. 1-65

Frontispiece. Photograph of Henry Kirke Browne by Matthew Brady (photoreproduction).
Box 2 Folder F24
Chapter III, Henry K. Brown and Lydia Udall were married; Chapter IV, Mr. and Mrs. Brown went to Europe, 1839-1842.
Box 2 Folder F25
Physical Description

pp. 66-181a

Chapter V.
Box 2 Folder F26
Physical Description

pp. 182-298

Chapter VII (1 of 2), United States Art Commission, February 5, 1858 to June 1862, 1858-1862.
Box 2 Folder F27
Physical Description

pp. 299-402

Chapter VII (2 of 2), United States Art Commission, Febr1866; Chapter X, September 1862 to July 1866, 1862-1866.
Box 2 Folder F28
Physical Description

pp. 403-494

Chapter XI, 1867-1882.
Box 2 Folder F29
Physical Description

pp. 495-644

Print, Suggest