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John Neagle papers and related items 2112 Finding aid prepared by Cary Majewicz.

Last updated on November 09, 2018.

First edition

Historical Society of

; 2012 John Neagle papers and related items

Table of Contents

Summary Information...... 3 Biography/History...... 4 Scope and Contents...... 5 Administrative Information...... 6 Controlled Access Headings...... 6 Bibliography...... 7 Collection Inventory...... 8

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Summary Information

Repository Historical Society of Pennsylvania

Creator Neagle, John, 1796-1865.

Title John Neagle papers and related items

Call number 2112

Date 1818-circa 1926, 1990, bulk 1820-1860

Extent 1.2 linear feet (1 box, 7 volumes)

Language English

Mixed materials (00008643)1 [Box]

Mixed materials (00008645)2 [Volume]

Mixed materials (00008644)1 [Volume]

Mixed materials (00008646)3 [Volume]

Mixed materials (00008647)4 [Volume]

Mixed materials (00008648)5 [Volume]

- Page 3 - John Neagle papers and related items Mixed materials (00008649)6 [Volume]

Mixed materials (00008650)7 [Volume]

Abstract John Neagle (1796-1865) worked mostly as a portrait painter during the first half of the nineteenth century. Born in , he worked primarily out of and studied under . This collection of his papers and related items consists mostly of volumes and cased photographs. Among the collection items are his student notebook, personal blotter, listing of loaned items, and scrapbooks. There are also thirteen daguerreotypes and an assortment of miscellaneous engravings.

Cite as:

Cite as: [Indicate cited item or series here], John Neagle papers and related items (Collection 2112), The Historical Society of Pennsylvania.

Biography/History

John Neagle, born in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1796, was a portrait painter who lived and worked in Philadelphia in the mid nineteenth century. While serving as an apprentice to Thomas Wilson, a "coach and ornamental painter," Neagle began to experiment with painting and consider painting as a career for himself. He studied briefly under and then more extensively under Thomas Sully. Both were prominent portrait painters of their times and Neagle quickly earned their praise. In 1818, Neagle ventured to Lexington, Kentucky, with the hope of setting up a business. Upon discovering that another painter, Matthew Harris Jouett, was already established there, he returned to Philadelphia. After a short stay, he traveled to Boston in 1825 to study art with . In 1826, Neagle returned to Philadelphia and married Mary Chester Sully (1802-1845), the niece and stepdaughter of Thomas Sully. That same year, Neagle executed what became his most famous work, Pat Lyon at the Forge. From 1830 to 1831, he served as director of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. In 1835, he helped establish the Artists' Fund Society.

- Page 4 - John Neagle papers and related items Among Neagle's most well-known works are Big Kansas, or Caussetongua, and Sharitarische, Chief of the Grand Pawnees (1821), Pat Lyon at the Forge (1826-1827), Patriotism and Age (1831), William Potts Dewees (1833), and (1843). After the death of his wife in 1845, Neagle slowly began to reduce his output and retire from public view. He suffered a stroke in the 1850s and died in Philadelphia in 1865.

Scope and Contents

This collection of John Neagle's papers and related items spans almost a century, though most of the material dates from the 1820s to the 1860s. Though small in size at seven volumes and one box, the collection covers Neagle's work and experimentations as an artist and his personal accounts. Materials in the collection are arranged in rough chronological order. Despite the overall lack of Neagle's personal correspondence or family material in the collection, some information about Neagle's personal life can be gleaned from his professional diary or blotter (Volume 4). The diary covers the period from 1825 to 1852 and Neagle began it just after he returned to Philadelphia from Boston. Throughout the volume, Neagle discussed his work and contacts with other artists. On 15 February 1833 he wrote of one "Mr. Welmore, engraver, [who] borrowed my portrait of Mr. Maffitt for the purpose of engraving from it." Neagle also frequently discussed personal events. "Begun to purchase furniture preparatory to Housekeeping," he wrote on 3 September 1826,"knowing that I should get no- thingwith my wife as a marriage portion, + this I knew long before I was engaged." (Box 1, Folder 2). On 10 February 1832, Neagle noted that his son "Garrett is cutting teeth again. Dr. Dewer(?) lanced his gums. I believe both he and Sarah [his daughter] are getting the measles." (Volume 4). Please note that loose pages from the blotter have been placed in Box 1, Folder 2, and copies of pages from the blotter that are owned by the American Philosophical Society are in Box 1, Folder 3. Other volumes in the collection include Neagle's student notebook (Volume 3), lists of items loaned to other artists, which demonstrates Neagle's many associations within the American artistic community (Volume 5), his personal cashbook (Volume 6), two scrapbooks of clippings collected and annotated by Neagle (Volumes 1-2), and a scrapbook assembled by a later family member that contains mostly obituaries and articles on members of the Neagle, Sully, Rawlins, and Darley families. This collection also contains thirteen cased photographs of Neagle family members (Box 1). These items have been digitized and links have been provided below to the records in HSP's Digital Library.

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Administrative Information

Historical Society of Pennsylvania

; 2012 Finding aid prepared by Cary Majewicz.

Sponsor Processing made possible by a generous donation from Howard Lewis.

Provenance Purchased, 1984. Gift of Sally Wickham, 1986. Accession number 1986.3.

Alternative format The collection has been microfilmed, XR 996-997.

Controlled Access Headings

Family Name(s)

• Neagle family.

Personal Name(s)

• Neagle, Mary Chester Sully. • Sully, Thomas, 1783-1872.

Subject(s)

- Page 6 - John Neagle papers and related items • Art and Artists--19th century. • Art and Artists--Pennsylvania--Philadelphia--19th Century. • Art, Modern--19th century--History. • Art--Study and teaching. • Artists--Pennsylvania--Philadelphia--19th century. • Courtship--19th Century.

Bibliography

Torchia, Robert W. John Neagle: Philadelphia Portrait Painter. Philadelphia: The Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1989.

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Collection Inventory

Box

Daguerreotypes, circa 1840-circa 1860. 1

Ellen Wheeler Neagle.

Ellen Wheeler Neagle.

Ellen Wheeler Neagle.

Ellen Wheeler Neagle.

L. Susan and Jane Darley Neagle.

John Neagle.

John Neagle.

Sarah Sully Neagle.

James Morgan Rawlins.

James Morgan Rawlins.

Morgan Neagle Rawlins.

General Alfred Sully.

Unidentified.

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Miscellaneous engravings and printed matter, 1818-1847, undated. 1 1 Scope and Contents note

This folder contains an assortment of items such as advertising cards, book plates, invitations, and other items. The are also photographs of Thomas Sully's studio, as well as a letter to "Blanche."

Loose pages removed from Blotter (Volume 4), 1827-1831. 1 2

Copies of pages from Blotter, 1826-1832, obtained from American 1 3 Philosophical Society, 1990.

Letter to "Blanche", undated. 1 4

Box

Scrapbooks, 1821-circa 1859. 1-2

Scope and Contents note

These two volumes contain clippings relating to art and artists, exhibitions, and other matters. Some articles written by Neagle and his personal notes, in his hand, appear throughout both books.

Student notebook, 1824. 3

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Scope and Contents note

This volume contains notes from the writings of famous artists, comments on the work of Thomas Sully, and Neagle's conclusions on his own experiments in shading. Eighteen pages are used and rest of the book is blank.

Blotter, 1825-1852. 4

Scope and Contents note

This volume served as Neagle's financial and personal diary. It contains notes on "Pat Lyon the Blacksmith," his courtship of Mary Chester Sully, family matters, and personal affairs.

Memoranda of Articles Loaned by J. Neagle, 1827-1861. 5

Scope and Contents note

This volume served as a record of the books, paintings, engravings, and cash Neagle lent to other painters and engravers.

Cashbook, 1832-1842. 6

Scrapbook of Neagle, Sully and related families, circa 1868-circa 1926 . 7

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