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Jeremiah Pearson Hardy

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Copy of Jeremiah Pearson Hardy's portrait of Sarah Molasses, by his daughter Anna Eliza Hardy, collection of Peabody Museum (Harvard)

Jeremiah Pearson Hardy (1800–1887) was a painter who spent most of his career in Bangor, Maine and specialized in portraits. He was also the central figure in a circle of 19th-century Bangor painters that included his daughter, Anna Eliza Hardy (1839–1934), son Frederick Willard Hardy, sister Mary Ann Hardy, and pupils Walter Franklin Lansil and George Edward Dale.[1]

Hardy was born in Pelham, New Hampshire. He first studied painting in Boston under David Brown, and then in New York under Samuel F.B. Morse, who was also the inventor of the telegraph. By 1826 Hardy had moved to Bangor, then a booming lumber port, and stayed for the rest of his life, painting portraits of not only the local elite but Penobscot Indians, the black barber Abraham Hanson, and members of his own family.[2] Among his extant works are:

Hardy's brother Jonathan became a successful local fur-trapper, as did Jonathan's son, Manly Hardy. Manly Hardy's daughter (Jeremiah Hardy's grandniece) was the folklorist Fannie Pearson Hardy Eckstorm.[3]

References

  1. ^ Diane Vatne and Pauline Kaiser, The Hardy Connection: Bangor Women Artists, 1830-1900 (Bangor Historical Society, 1992)
  2. ^ James B. Vickery, Jeremiah Pearson Hardy: Maine Portraitist (Waterville, Me.: Colby College Art Museum, 1966)
  3. ^ Fannie Pearson Hardy Eckstorm, Jeremiah Pearson Hardy: A Maine Portrait Painter (Waterville, Me.: Colby College, 1939)