- John Warner Barber
John Warner Barber (born
February 2 ,1798 - died June 1885), was an American engraver whose books of state, national, and local history featured his vivid illustrations, said [http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0806144.html] "John Warner Barber" page at InfoPlease.com web site, cites "The Columbia Electrionic Encyclopedia, sixth edition, accessedAugust 23 ,2006 ] to have caught the flavor and appearance of city, town, and countryside scenes in his day.Life
He was born in East Windsor,
Connecticut , and learned his craft from the East Windsor printmaker Abner Reed. [http://www.chs.org/graphcoll/barberdraw1.htm] Connecticut Historical Society Web site, Web page titled "Connecticut in 1836: Drawings by John Warner Barber," accessedAugust 23 ,2006 ] In 1823 he opened a business in New Haven, where he produced religious and historical books, illustrated with his own wood and steel engravings.He traveled around Connecticut, creating ink sketches of town greens, hotels, schools, churches, and harbors and collected local history as he went. He also delved into the works of historians. From all this he produced the book now commonly called "Connecticut Historical Collections". The full title is "Connecticut Historical Collections, Containing a General Collection of Interesting Facts, Traditions, Biographical Sketches, Anecdotes, Etc., Relating to the History and Antiquities of Every Town in Connecticut with Geographical Descriptions".
The book has been called "the first popular local history published in the U.S." [http://www.biblio.com/books/32217471.html] From the Bibliola.com Web site, page on Warner's "Historical Collections", accessed
August 23 ,2006 ] . The book sold well -- 7,000 copies in its first year even though it cost three dollars, then an average week's pay. Twelve years later it was reissued and again sold well. "Today, though his wood engravings are well known, few copies of the book [Connecticut "Historical Collections"] remain," according to the Bibliopola Press Web site, which, as of August 2006, was selling a reprint version. "Antique dealers unfortunately do a brisk business selling the woodcuts from volumes they have 'broken.'"Barber started with rough pencil sketches and developed them into more detailed wash drawings. He then transferred the drawings directly to small blocks of boxwood on which he engraved the designs.
"He talked with townspeople, gathered local documents and made quick sketches everywhere he went," according to a "New York Times" article from
December 10 ,1989 , quoted on a print-selling Web site. [ [http://www.okworkshop.com/Catalogue/cat25.htm] From the "Online Catalogue" of the "One of a Kind Workshop," a Web page titled "Reprinted from Historical Collections by John Warner Barber," accessedAugust 23 ,2006 ] "The illustrations depict each town center, with its homes and churches, academies and courthouses sailboats plying a river or harbor, an occasional factory belching puffs of smoke and always a tiny figure or two, often the artist in his top hat, sketching the scene or pointing to the view."He died in New Haven in June 1885.
His books
*"Historical Scenes in the United States" (1827)
*"History and Antiquities of New Haven" (1831)
*"Religious Events" (1832)
*"Historical Collections" of Connecticut (1836)
*"Historical Collections" of Massachusetts (Worcester, 1839)
*"A History of the Amistad Captives", coauthored by E.L. Barber (New Haven, 1840) [ [http://amistad.mysticseaport.org/library/misc/barber.1840.amis.capt.html] From the "Exploring "Amistad" at Mystic Seaport" Web site, Web page titled "Popular Media," accessedAugust 23 ,2006 ]
*"History and Antiquities of New England, New York, and New Jersey" (1841)
*"Historical Collections" of New York, coauthored by Henry Howe, of New Haven (1841)
*"Elements of General History" (New Haven, 1844)
*"Historical Collections" of New Jersey, coauthored by Henry Howe, of New Haven (1844)
*"Historical Collections" of Virginia, coauthored by Henry Howe, of New Haven (1844)
*"Incidents in American History" (New York, 1847)
*"Historical Collections" of Ohio, coauthored by Henry Howe, of New Haven (1847)
*"Religious Emblems and Allegories" (1848)
*"Historical, Poetical, and Pictorial American Scenes", coauthored by Elizabeth G. Barber (1850)
*"European Historical Collections" (1855)
*"Our Whole Country, Historical and Descriptive" (Cincinnati, 1861)ee also
*"The Picture Preacher", by Henry Howe (Philadelphia)
Footnotes
External links
* [http://www.chs.org/graphcoll/barberdraw1.htm A sampling of Barber's Connecticut drawings at the Connecticut Historical Society]
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