Patrick Henry Before the Virginia House of Burgesses

Name/Title

Patrick Henry Before the Virginia House of Burgesses

Entry/Object ID

76.5.1

Description

"Patrick Henry Before the Virginia House of Burgesses" (1851) by Peter Frederick Rothermel. Oil painting on canvas in a frame of gilt and gesso on pine. It depicts Patrick Henry delivering his Stamp Act speech on May 30, 1765. Henry is standing on the right side of the canvas facing left and gesturing outwardly with his right hand, wearing a long red coat. Seated around him are members of the Virginia House of Burgesses, including Edmund Pendleton, Peyton Randolph, George Wythe, and Speaker of the House John Robinson. A bronze plaque centered at the base of the frame reads, "Patrick Henry Delivering his Address Before the Virginia House of Burgesses in 1765 by Peter Frederic Rothermel, Deposited by Charles L. Hamilton."

Type of Painting

Easel

Artwork Details

Medium

Canvas, Paint, Wood, Gold, Oil Paint

Collection

Peter F. Rothermel Collection

Made/Created

Artist Information

Artist

Rothermel, Peter

Role

Artist

Date made

1851

Time Period

19th Century

Place

* Untyped Place

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Inscription/Signature/Marks

Type

Signature

Location

Obverse lower right

Transcription

P. F. Rothermel, 1851

Language

English

Location

Inside 2nd lining fabric

Transcription

[Partial inscription/partially legible] "...-- check ----/ ...---- March ----/ ...al --- Port/ of.... [illegible].../ .... 37 --- 25x30/ .... 38- ________[blank line]"

Language

English

Dimensions

Width

61 in

Length

79 in

Width

9 in

Provenance

Notes

Peter Frederick Rothermel (1812–1895) was born on July 8, 1812, in Nescopeck, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. Growing up in Philadelphia, he was trained as a land surveyor but began studying painting at age 22. Starting as a sign painter, he studied briefly with John R. Smith (1775–1849) and Bass Otis (1775–1861). He began his artistic career as a portrait painter but soon developed an interest in historical painting. His first popular success was "De Soto Discovering the Mississippi" in 1843. Rothermel was active in art societies and associations in Philadelphia, including serving as a director and instructor at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. He died in Linfield, Pennsylvania, on August 15, 1895. "Patrick Henry Before the Virginia House of Burgesses" secured Rothermel's immediate and lasting fame as a historical painter. In 1851, it was commissioned as a benefit for the Philadelphia Art Union, which was suffering from grave financial difficulties due to a depressed economy and a fire. Rothermel chaired a group of thirty-five artists who pledged to contribute paintings valued at a minimum of $50. Rothermel contributed "Patrick Henry" for a commission of $1,000. Patrick Henry delivered one of his most famous speeches before the Virginia House of Burgesses on May 30, 1765. Op­posing the Stamp Act, he had introduced five resolutions the day before, asserting the rights of the colonies to make their laws. His famous speech, popularized by William Wirt’s book, "Sketches of the Life and Character of Patrick Henry" (1817), is the subject of Rothermel’s paint­ing. Rothermel depicted Pat­rick Henry at the conclusion of his fiery oratory as he de­clared, “Caesar had his Brutus—Charles the first, his Cromwell—and George the third may profit by their example. If this be treason, make the most of it!” In Rothermel’s painting, the audience is moved by Henry’s impassioned words. The artist’s composition is dramatic yet sophisticated and leaves little (if any) doubt that he had closely studied the works of High Renaissance and Baroque painters Titian and Rubens. Although not entirely historically accurate, Rothermel's portrayal captured the romanticism of the nineteenth century and the patriotic zeal influencing Americans during this period. The Philadelphia Art Union listed Rothermel's painting as the first prize for members in 1852. Subscribers received a copy of Alfred Jones' engraving of the painting and a chance to win the original in a raffle in exchange for a $5 membership fee. It was raffled as the first prize along with several other paintings in the distribution of 1852 by the Art Union of Philadelphia. In 1852, Rothermel exhibited "Patrick Henry Before the Virginia House of Burgesses" in Baltimore, Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Richmond, Virginia. Tradition holds that Rothermel’s picture was placed in the U.S. Capitol rotunda, but extant records are vague, and it cannot be docu­mented. That year, German-American painter Emanuel Leutze exhibited "Washington Crossing the Delaware" in Washington, D.C., and George P. A. Healy exhibited "Webster Replying to Hayne in the Senate." Sen. James Cooper of Pennsylvania spon­sored a resolution in April directing the Committee of the Library to investigate the expe­diency of employing Leutze and Healy to create paintings that would adorn the U.S. Capitol. In June, the Senate amended the resolution to examine the possibility of engaging Rothermel to paint two subjects “to be drawn from American revolutionary history.” The Senate amend­ment resulted, in part, from a petition circulated by the officers of the Philadelphia Art Union requesting that Rother­mel be employed to fill “one of the panels of the rotunda of the Capitol.” Nothing came of these resolutions, although in 1861, Emanuel Leutze received a commission for "Westward the Course of Empire Takes Its Way" in the Capitol extension. Even though Rothermel exhibited "Christian Martyrs" in the Capitol during the 1860s, he did not obtain a govern­ment commission. As work on the Capi­tol progressed, painters con­tinued to be evaluated and reevaluated for possible com­missions. In February 1854, the influential Gouverneur Kem­ble of Cold Spring, NY, who had served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1837 to 1841, wrote to Montgomery Meigs, Architect of the Capitol, “I saw the other day in Philadelphia a picture by Rothermel, representing Patrick Henry delivering his celebrated speech before the Burgesses of Virginia, which for truth and expression, and good color, is equal to any thing that the other [Leutze] has done, and the drawing is better than most of Leutze’s pictures ….” Obviously unim­pressed, Meigs replied, “Rothermel’s Patrick Henry seemed to me a sketch, as though he had not the indus­try or skill to paint a finished picture." By the 1850s, the smoothly finished pictures of artists working in Düsseldorf, Germany—among them Emanuel Leutze—had become popular in America. Meigs was not the only individual critical of Rothermel’s more painterly style. Henry T. Tuckerman in his widely read "Book of the Artists", published in 1867, acknowledged Rother­mel’s talent, but also opined that the artist had produced “a large number of works with a rapidity incompatible with grand permanent results.” However, Rothermel’s "Patrick Henry Be­fore the Virginia House of Burgesses" and its engraving received critical acclaim and were crucial in further establishing Rothermel’s reputation. Rothermel's painting eventually became part of the private collection of Joseph Harrison Jr. (1810–1874), an active member in the Art Union. It was sold with the rest of his estate after his death in 1912. Charles L. Hamilton (1847–1930) purchased the painting for $650 at that sale. That same year, he loaned it to the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts for display in their galleries. The painting remained with the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts until the sale and distribution of the Hamilton estate sometime after 1956. At this time, the heirs of Charles and Olivia Hamilton considered selling or donating Rothermel's "Patrick Henry Before the Virginia House of Burgesses" to an appropriate historical foundation, along with various other items of Patrick Henry. After considering the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and the Capitol in Richmond, the Hamilton heirs agreed to donate the painting to the Patrick Henry Memorial Foundation in April 1959. In a special ceremony at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond on April 29, 1959, Virginia Governor J. Lindsey Almond accepted the Rothermel painting from the Hamilton family and presented it to James S. Easley, President of the Patrick Henry Memorial Foundation.