In Report of the Forrest divorce case (New York, 1852), title vignette and p. 96., Other portraits appear in: The Forrest divorce suit, report of the trial of Catherine N. Forrest vs. Edwin Forrest for divorce (New York, 1851), p. 96, second sequence; Gleason's pictorial drawing-room companion, vol. 2, no. 9 (Feb 28, 1852), p. 144; Gleason's pictorial drawing-room companion, vol. 2, no. 17 (Apr. 24, 1852), p. 257., Bust-length portrait of Forrest, with her hair in a bun.
In Gleason's pictorial drawing-room companion, vol. 2, no. 1 (Jan. 3, 1852), p. 8-9., Fourteen separate waist-length portraits surrounded by arabesque decoration and putti: M.M. Ballou; Sylvanus Cobb, Jr.; Mrs. E. Wellmont; Geo. Canning Hill; Caroline A. Hayden; Fred Hunter; Mrs. C.E. Lovering [i.e., Mrs. E.C. Lovering?]; F. Gleason; L. Curtiss Hine; Francis A. Durivage; Mrs. M.E. Robinson; F. Clinton Barrington; Miss Sarah M. Howe; Dr. J.H. Robinson. Mrs. Robinson wears eyeglasses.
In Gleason's pictorial drawing-room companion, vol. 2, no. 23 (Boston, June 5, 1852), p. 361. "The likeness we give herewith is by our artist, Mr Rowse"., The actress, also known as Sophia Elizabeth Munson Roberts, adopted Miss Kimberly as her stage name., "'You will see by the literature I enclose that I am occupied in aiding in the control of the only insurance company in the world organized and conducted by women,-- myself being the originator of the project. I also conduct a family hotel comprising the block between 21ist and 22nd Sts. My life has been passed in all absorbing labor, mental and physical.' We learn from Mrs. Harriet Bradley Jackson that Sophia was formerly an actress became quite a performer and went all round. She was known in the profession as Miss Kimberly which was her mother's maiden name. Another adds that she was a Shakespearean reader. Her husband was an actor also. After she left the stage she practiced medicine."--Munson, M.A. 1637-1887 The Munson record, v. 2 (New Haven, 1896), p. 963., Three-quarter length portrait of Miss Kimberly, wearing earrings, a bracelet, and a cross necklace with a flower in her hair.
In Judson, E.C. Memoir of Sarah B. Judson (New York, 1852), front cover (stamped in gold)., Below image: Faithful is He that calleth you [1 Thessalonians 5:24]., Full-length portrait of Mrs. Judson, standing between mourners (including Adoniram Judson?) and storm-tossed ship. She points to a vignette (depicting buildings and people in Burma?) within an arabesque frame, above which an angel hovers. Snakes curl around the lower edge of the frame.
In Hart, J.S. Female prose writers of America (Philadelphia, 1852), plate opposite p. 105., Facsimile signature: C.M. Kirkland., Bust-length portrait of the writer in a bonnet.
In Hart, J.S. Female prose writers of America (Philadelphia, 1852), plate opposite p. 63., Facsimile signature: M.J. McIntosh., Shoulder-length portrait of the writer.
In The Napoleon dynasty, or, The history of the Bonaparte family (New York, 1852), plate opposite p. 451., In 1803, Elizabeth ("Betsy") Patterson married Jérôme Bonaparte (1784-1860), the youngest brother of Napoleon I. The wedding took place in Baltimore, Maryland. Her taste in clothing, inspired by then-current European fashions, provoked criticism as immodest. Complying with Napoleon’s orders, her husband returned to Europe and effectively abandoned her., Waist-length portrait of the Maryland native, wearing a garment with a low neckline.
Three-quarter length portrait of the young girl playing with a necklace strand., In Hewitt, Mary E., ed., The memorial (New York 1852), plate opposite p. 29., May Vincent Osgood was the second child of poet Frances Sargent Locke Osgood and painter Samuel Stillman Osgood.
Waist-length portrait of the young girl holding a butterfly., In Hewitt, Mary E., ed., The memorial (New York 1852), plate opposite p. 19., Ellen Frances Osgood was the first child of poet Frances Sargent Locke Osgood and painter Samuel Stillman Osgood.
Waist-length portrait of Mrs. Sears, seated next to a table on which there are books., In Hamline, Melinda. Memoirs of Mrs. Angeline B. Sears, with extracts from her correspondence (Cincinnati, 1851), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: Your affectionate Angeline., Mrs. Sears was the wife of the itinerant Methodist minister Clinton W. Sears. As the wife of a minister, she had occasion to aid others, especially the sick and the poor, before her death at a young age from consumption (the disease known as tuberculosis today).
In Church, P. Notices of the life of Theodosia Ann Barker Dean (Boston, 1851), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: Theodosia A. Dean., Waist-length portrait of Mrs. Dean, with a palm trees and a pagoda-like tower.
In Rickey, A.S. Forest flowers of the West (Philadelphia, 1851), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: Yours ever Anna S. Rickey., Waist-length portrait of the writer, holding a book and a pen.
In Priere (New Orleans, La., 1851), cover vignette., “A Mademoiselle Sallie R. Price”., Full-length portrait of a young woman on her knees praying to a statue of the Virgin Mary; the dedicatee, Sallie R. Price, married Ludovic Hanau, the author of the song Priere, which expresses the hope that the Virgin Mary will watch over the couple.
In Gleason’s pictorial drawing-room companion, vol. 1, no. 28 (Nov. 8, 1851), p. 440., Full-length portraits of the child actresses Kate and Ellen Bateman in costume for their appearance in Bombastes furioso, Kate in the role of King Artaxaminous (?).
In The lighted valley, or, The closing scenes in the life of a beloved sister (New York, 1850), frontispiece., The young woman was the daughter of the Rev. Robert Bolton (1788-1857), an Episcopalian clergyman who was born Savannah, Georgia; in 1807, he traveled to England, where he married Anne Jay Bolton (1793-1859); the couple and their children left England in 1836 and settled in New York; they opened the Bolton Priory School in Pelham Manor, New York, in 1838., Three-quarter-length portrait of the young woman., Another portrait appears in Bolton, R. The Lighted valley, or, The closing scenes of the life of Abby Bolton (London, 1851), frontispiece ("Eng'd by W. Holl, from a painting by her brother [i.e., William Jay Bolton]").
In Life and confession of Ann Walters, the female murderess!! (Boston, 1850), front wrapper., Full-length portrait of the murderer, possibly a fictitious character; cf. McDade 1036.
In Tingley, H.F. Incidents in the life of Milton W. Streeter, the jealous and infatuated murderer, who murdered his young and beautiful wife, Elvira W. Streeter (Pawtucket, R.I., 1850), p. [3]., Full-length portrait of the woman, prostrate on the floor, with a man holding her by the hair to position her on his knee while he wields a razor high above his head; the woman has her right arm raised toward the razor.
Waist-length portrait of Harriet Ware, wearing a bonnet and a dress with lace collar, knitting., In Wayland, Francis. A memoir of Harriet Ware (Providence, 1850), frontispiece., Harriet Ware was an educator and philanthropist who founded the Providence Children’s Friend Society after retiring as a teacher at Indian Point, a suburb of Providence., “She seldom allowed herself to sit many minutes without work of some kind in her hands. While entertaining callers and friends, knitting was her most common employment, and, even while intensely interested in conversation, her needles would be flying, as if impelled by some unseen power. Knitting work came at length to be called her ‘coat of arms;’ and in the daguerreotype portrait, a copy of which was taken only at the urgent request of her friends, which I believe is to accompany the memoir of her, her knitting work has its appropriate place, and may serve as a fit emblem of the homely virtues which she honored and practiced.”--P. 129-30.
In Summary of the transactions of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, vol. 3 (1850), plate opposite p. 93., “Ruth Tucker, a large and healthy negro woman, aged twenty-four, was admitted into the Pennsylvania Hospital in January last, on account of tumours developed in the lobe of each ear. She stated that between five and six years before, she had her ears pierced, and that soon afterwards brass rings were inserted into them…. Some swelling had already shown itself around the punctures before they were taken out … and gave origin to the tumours, which had continued since slowly to enlarge.”—P. 93., Waist-length portrait of Ruth Tucker, a patient whom Dr. George W. Norris treated for tumors on her ears.
In J.A.B. Mary Bean: the factory girl / a domestic story, illustrative of the trials and temptations of factory life (Boston, 1850), front wrapper., Waist-length portrait of Bean, wearing a bracelet., Miss Caswell, also known as Mary Bean, was a factory girl who became the subject of popular fiction after her body was discovered in a stream, following her death by a botched abortion., "Not unfrequently impatient of restraint, and indisposed to listen to the voice of counsel, the unthinking female is ensnared in the toils of the destroyer, and being insidiously led onward, step by step, she awakes from her dream of fancied happiness, but to mourn over her dishonor, and the destruction of her cherished hopes. Such was the case with Mary Bean. Her life, her sufferings, and her death, are but a picture of the life, the sufferings, and the death of many others. Let those of her sex, then, who may chance to read these pages, be admonished in season, and not turn a deaf ear to those counsels, which, if regarded, would save them from misery and dishonor."--P. 40.
Bust-length portrait of Sarah Margru Kinson Green., Sarah Margru Kinson Green, a child captive onboard the Amistad slave ship, returned to the United States to study at Oberlin College., “This girl, one of the Amistad captives, called in her native language Margru, meaning black snake, called at our office for an examination, while a stranger to us. She was described as possessing strong friendship, independence, perseverance, energy, and unusual intellectual powers ; remarkable memory, and the faculty of acquiring education. We afterward learned that she had been educated at the Oberlin Institute, in Ohio, and excelled in all branches of study, and was one of the first scholars in the institution in mathematics and superior sciences ; remarkable for memory and native intelligence. She has gone to her native land as a missionary. The forehead is broad and high, and particularly prominent in the center, in the region of eventuality, and the whole head is large, sustained by a vigorous constitution. She is far superior to Africans generally. The same is true of the majority of the Amistad captives, particularly so of Cinquez, the leader. Dignity, independence, and scope of mind were such as to do honor to individuals of any nation.”--P. 231., In the American phrenological journal, vol. 12 (1850), p. 231., Another portrait appears in The illustrated phrenological almanac for 1851 (1850), p. 30.
In Godey's Lady's book 41 (December 1850), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: Truly yr friend Sarah J. Hale., Waist-length portrait of the writer/editor.
In De Kroyft, H.A. Place in thy memory (New York, 1850), frontispiece., Facsimile inscription: Instead of their eyes; the blind pick up the gems of thought with their fingers. S.H. De Kroyft., Three-quarter length portrait of blind writer, holding an open book.
In The Tragic almanac (New York, 1849), p. [10]., According to the accompanying article, Mrs. Colton shot Mr. Corlis after having had “illicit intercourse” with him., Probably a fictitious character., Full-length portrait of the murderer standing on a sidewalk, firing a pistol at the victim.
In Trial of Mrs. Margaret Howard, for the murder of Miss Mary Ellen Smith (Cincinnati, 1849), p. [4]., Mary Ellen Smith was stabbed to death by her lover’s wife., Bust-length portrait of the murder victim, wearing a bonnet.
In: Comfield, A.S. Alida, or, Miscellaneous sketches (New York, 1849), frontispiece., “Optimum vitae genus eligito nam consuetudo faciet jucundissimum.”, Amelia Stratton Comfield was the wife of John F. (or John L.?) Comfield., Waist-length portrait of the writer wearing a short-sleeved dress; based on oil painting by David Rogers., For image of painting of Mrs. Comfield, press link below.
In Trial of Mrs. Margaret Howard, for the murder of Miss Mary Ellen Smith (Cincinnati, 1849), title vignette., Mrs. Margaret Howard was tried for stabbing her husband’s mistress to death; she was acquitted on grounds of insanity., Bust-length portrait of the murderess, wearing a bonnet or head scarf.
In Mayo, S.C.E. Selections from the writings of Mrs. Sarah C. Edgarton Mayo (Boston, 1849), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: Yours affectionately Sarah C. Edgarton., Bust-length portrait of the writer.
Full-length portrait of Miss McCrea in an outdoor setting with two Indian men. She flails her arms while one man holds her and the other wields a tomahawk., In the Pictorial national library, vol. 2 (Mar., 1849), p. 129., Miss Jane McCrea was engaged to David Jones, a British general, during the Revolutionary War and while traveling to visit him she was taken captive by Indians and killed. Accounts of her death furthered anti-Loyalist sentiment in the Colonies., Another portrait appears in: Wilson, D. The life of Jane McCrea (1853), p. [156].
Emily Haven was also known as Alice Lee, Alice Haven, Alice Neal, Cousin Alice, and Clara Cushman., In Godey's Lady's book 39 (December 1849), frontispiece., Three-quarter length portrait of the writer, seated.
In Lee, J. Religious experience and journal of Mrs. Jarena Lee (Philadelphia, 1849), frontispiece., Waist-length portrait of black preacher, seated at table with pen in hand; inkwell, books, and other papers also on table.
In Read, T.B. Female poets of America (Philadelphia, 1849), plate opposite p. 87., Facsimile signature: Emma C. Embury., Waist-length portrait of the writer, wearing a lace garment.
Bust-length portrait in profile of Maria Monk., In The American phrenological journal, vol. 11 (July, 1849), p. 314., Maria Monk, supposed author of Awful disclosures of Maria Monk, or, the Hidden secrets of a nun's life in a convent exposed, claimed to have suffered sexual abuse as a nun in a convent in Montreal. Though the book detailing her allegations sold well, the veracity of her claims was doubted almost immediately after its publication, and contemporary scholars regard her story as false., The article accompanying this portrait references the recent death of Maria Monk, suggesting that she in fact died in 1849.
In Wilkes, G. The lives of Helen Jewett, and Richard P. Robinson (New York, 1849), frontispiece., Portrait caption: Helen Jewett at her childhood's home., Helen (sometimes known as Ellen) Jewett, a prostitute, was brutally murdered, presumably by her jealous lover. Her death caused a media sensation., "She was early cast alone upon the world, and her recollections of those who should have been the patterns for her guidance, were the recollections of a false example. In the next place, she had too much education for her condition in life, and her ambition, made unmanageable by its alliance with a fervid temperament, betrayed her, by too short a cut, to the society for which she yearned. The result was a sudden but hollow exaltation; a crazy revel; a brief career, and a shocking end."--P. 132., More illustrations depicting Jewett appear in Wilkes, G. The lives of Helen Jewett, and Richard P. Robinson (New York, 1849), p. 11, p. 29, p. 39, p. 43, p. 72, p. 81, p. 87, p. 118., Full-length portrait of Jewett, carrying a basket, with a cottage in a rural scene in the background.
In Graham's Magazine 34 (1849), plate opposite p. 156. "Engraved Expressly for Graham's Magazine.", Waist-length portrait of the writer, seated with pen in hand, with open bound manuscript and other volumes (both printed book and manuscript?) nearby.
In The Mothers' journal, and Family visitant, v. 14, no. 3 (March, 1849), plate opposite p. 69., Facsimile signature: With very great respect Sir, Truly Yours Eliza C. Allen., Waist-length portrait of Mrs. Allen, wearing bonnet; with a bookcase in the background.
In Read, T.B. Female poets of America (Philadelphia, 1849), plate opposite p. 225, Facsimile signature: Amelia B. Welby, Waist-length portrait of the writer.
In Read, T.B. Female poets of America (Philadelphia, 1849), plate opposite p. 305., Facsimile signature: E.C. Kinney., Waist-length portrait of the writer.
In Read, T.B. Female poets of America (Philadelphia, 1849), plate opposite p. 265., Facsimile signature: Anne C. Lynch., Bust-length portrait of the writer.
In Ten years in Oregon (Ithaca, 1848), frontispiece., Born in Tioga County, New York, Sarepta (or Serepta) White accompanied her husband Elijah White to Oregon in 1836, after the Board of Missions of the New England Conference of the Methodist Church appointed him the physician to the Willamette Valley, Oregon. During their time in Oregon, both their son and their adopted son drowned. Later in life she practiced medicine in San Francisco., Waist-length of the wife of physician-missionary, next to her husband.