David Bustill Bowser

David Bustill Bowser
David Bustill Bowser

Banner of the 22nd Regiment US Colored Troops
Born January 16, 1820
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Died June 30, 1900
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Nationality African American
Field Portraits, ornamentation, painting
Works Portraits of John Brown, Abraham Lincoln; regimental banners

David Bustill Bowser (January 16, 1820, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – June 30, 1900, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) was an African-American ornamental artist and portraitist.

Bowser attended a private school run by his cousin Sarah Mapps Douglass and studied art with his cousin Robert Douglass, Jr., an African-American pupil of Thomas Sully. During the American Civil War, he was commissioned to design banners for several regiments of U.S. Colored Troops that were formed after the Emancipation Proclamation at Camp William Penn, just outside Philadelphia. He painted a portrait of famed abolitionist John Brown, who sat for the painting at the Bowser home, which was a stop on the Underground Railroad.

Family

Son of Jeremiah Bowser and grandson of Cyrus Bustill (1732–1806), who was an early member of the Free African Society, he was also the cousin of abolitionist Frederick Douglass. He married Elizabeth Harriet Stevens Gray (June 13, 1831 – November 29, 1908); their children included daughters Raphael Bowser, also an artist, and Ida Elizabeth Bowser Asbury (1870–1955), a violinist and music teacher.

References

  • Samella S. Lewis, African American art and artists, University of California Press, 2003.

External links


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  • Camp William Penn — was a Union Army training camp located in Cheltenham, Pennsylvania from 1863 to 1865, notable for being the first training grounds dedicated to African American troops who enlisted in the United States Army during the American Civil War. Some… …   Wikipedia

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