Portrait of Abraham Lincoln: Difference between revisions

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The "First Portrait" of Abraham Lincoln hangs in Memorial Hall.  The portrait was done by Charles Alfred Barry in June, 1860 when Lincoln was newly nominated Republican candidate for President.  The portrait had been bequested to the library by George Henry Torr of Andover in 1915. In 1947, director Miriam Putnam recognized that the drawing hanging in the library was the lost first portrait of Lincoln to be drawn from life.
The "First Portrait" of Abraham Lincoln hangs in Memorial Hall.  The portrait was done by Charles Alfred Barry in June, 1860 when Lincoln was newly nominated Republican candidate for President.  The portrait had been bequested to the library by George Henry Torr of Andover in 1915. It was thought that this portrait had been lost over the years, until director Miriam Putnam recognized and identified it in 1947


See
See
* Andover File--Memorial Hall Library--Artworks--Lincoln Portrait
* Andover File--Memorial Hall Library--Artworks--Lincoln Portrait


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--[[User:Glenda|Glenda]] 14:19, November 22, 2006 (EST)
--[[User:Glenda|Glenda]] 14:19, November 22, 2006 (EST)
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Revision as of 10:41, 15 December 2009

The "First Portrait" of Abraham Lincoln hangs in Memorial Hall. The portrait was done by Charles Alfred Barry in June, 1860 when Lincoln was newly nominated Republican candidate for President. The portrait had been bequested to the library by George Henry Torr of Andover in 1915. It was thought that this portrait had been lost over the years, until director Miriam Putnam recognized and identified it in 1947

See

  • Andover File--Memorial Hall Library--Artworks--Lincoln Portrait
  • Andover Townsman, March 6, 1947
  • Christian Science Monitor, December 12, 1947


--Glenda 14:19, November 22, 2006 (EST)


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