Title |
Pharazyn, Henry |
Date |
ca. 1822-December 1902 |
Description |
Henry Pharazyn, born ca. 1822 in England, brother of colorist and lithograph publisher Alfred Pharazyn, worked as an artist,
jeweler, frame dealer, colorist, and lithograph publisher in Philadelphia during the mid nineteenth century. Known lithographs
issued by Pharazyn include "Trotting Cracks of Philadelphia Returning from the Race at Point Breeze Park,..." (1870) published
at his frame establishment at 1725 Lombard Street.
|
|
During the 1840s city directories listed Pharazyn as a "military artist" at 13 Dugan Street (Center City), while in the 1850s
he was listed as a jeweler at 199 1/2 (i.e., 500 block) South Street. The 1860 and 1870 censuses record him as an artist (resident
of Ward 3) and colorist (resident of Ward 7), respectively, whose personal estate had increased from $100 to $1000. According
to the 1870 city directory, he also worked at a saloon. During the 1870s, he was employed as a carpet, and later herbs dealer
(529 South Seventh Street), the latter which he continued as an occupation into the 1880s. Pharazyn died a pauper and known
as an eccentric in December 1902; his body found in January 1903, days after his death in his cellar residence at 303 South
Seventh Street.
|
|
Pharazyn was married to Ann (b. ca. 1825) with whom he had a son Alfred (b. ca. 1852), reported as mentally and physically
challenged. Ann, described as deaf in the 1870 census, died in the 1880s and son Alfred resided in Pennsylvania Hospital at
the time of his father's death.
|
Is part of |
Philadelphia on Stone Biographical Dictionary of Lithographers |
References |
See Pharazyn, Alfred. |
Call number |
Philadelphia on Stone Biographical Dictionary of Lithographers |
Bibliographic citation |
Census 1860, 1870 |
|
Library Company of Philadelphia research file |
|
Peters, 325 |