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The former Ohio State University cheerleader met her now husband in college, where he played quarterback. The Herbstreits settled down in Ohio, but later moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where they ...
His portraits of Tennessee governors, commissioned by the Tennessee Historical Society, can be seen in the Tennessee State Capitol and the Tennessee State Museum in Nashville. [1] [2] He also did portraits for the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and the Grand Lodge of Tennessee, [1] [2] as well as a portrait of Alexander Campbell. [2]
William Giles Harding was born in 1808 near Nashville, Tennessee to John Harding, a Virginian, who one year earlier (1807) purchased 250 acres (1.0 km 2) near Richland Creek.
Earl was the son of portrait painter Ralph Earl and his second wife Ann Whiteside, and thus a member of the prominent Earle family. He was born c. 1785–1788, probably in New York City, and likely received his early training in portraiture from his father, whose naive style is reflected in the younger Earl's earliest works.
Edward Dalton Marchant, miniature self-portrait, c. 1860. The Walters Art Museum. Edward Dalton Marchant (1806-1887), also known as Edward D. Marchant and E. D. Marchant, was an American artist. He was born in Edgartown, Massachusetts in 1806. Largely self-taught, Marchant began his career as a house painter, establishing a portrait studio in ...
Calhoun moved to Nashville, Tennessee with his parents before 1812, and his father returned to Pennsylvania to serve in the War of 1812. [2] After the war, the family moved to a farm in Ohio, where Calhoun's his younger brother, George Reid Calhoun, was born. [2] Calhoun was "trained as a silversmith in Philadelphia." [1]
Some of his best-known portraits include: John Hill, who was president of Aetna insurance in Hartford in the 1960s; Frank L Boyden, headmaster of Deerfield Academy (MA) (1902–1968) Wallace W. Robbins, Minister of the First Unitarian Church in Worcester, MA from 1956 to 1975; G. Keith Funston, President of Trinity College
In 1816 his family moved to Marietta, Ohio and he graduated from Marietta High School. He studied fine art at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia when he was in his 20s. [3] After school, he went back to Ohio and made a living painting portraits. From 1827, on he was an itinerant painter traveling around southeast Ohio.