In Ballou's pictorial drawing-room companion, v. 10, no. 20 (Boston, May 17, 1856), p. 305., Another portrait appears in: Ballou's pictorial drawing-room companion, v. 10, no. 19 (Boston, May 10, 1856), p. 300., Full-length portrait of Barrow, wearing an elaborately decorated Native American costume and holding a spear, with dwellings in a natural setting in the background.
In Griswold, R.W. The Republican Court, or, American society in the days of Washington. New and rev. ed. (New York, 1856), plate opposite p. 169., Three-quarter length portrait of Mrs. Adams seated in front of a fireplace mantel and vase filled with flowers, holding flowers in her right hand, wearing a full dress and pearl necklace.
In Aunt Sally; or, the cross the way of freedom. / A narrative of the slave-life and purchase of the mother of Rev. Isaac Williams, of Detroit, Michigan (Cincinnati, 1858), frontispiece., Sally Williams's son Isaac purchased her freedom. The publishers envisioned the narrative of her life, in which the portrait appears, as a text that would inspire readers "to labor for that oppressed and unhappy race which "Aunt Sally" represents, so, at length, this unfortunate people shall be slaves no longer, but shall find that, to them all, the Cross has been the Way of Freedom."--P.v., "And this is the mother and this is the son, who, through such peril and labor, have escaped from bondage into freedom. The facts need no comments. They are eloquent enough of themselves. But when we remember that these are not isolated cases, but that every day there is this suffering and strife for liberty, with only now and then one fortunate enough to obtain it, they become "trumpet-tongued," and plead with us to rest not till all over the land liberty shall no longer be a name only, but the right and blessing of every creature."--P.213., Another illustration picturing Williams appears in: Aunt Sally; or, the cross the way of freedom, plate opposite p. 214., Waist-length portrait of Williams, wearing a bonnet and eyeglasses.
In The Ladies' Repository (November, 1859), plate preceding p. 641. "Engraved expressly for the Ladies Repository.", Waist-length portrait of Mrs. Wilkins seated in front of a window with a Liberian village visible in the background.
In Badger, C.N. The teacher's last lesson: memoir of Martha Whiting (Boston, 1855), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: Your affectionate friend M. Whiting., Whiting, a pious woman who was devoted to making her life useful, taught at the Charlestown Female Seminary in Boston, Massachusetts., Bust-length portrait of Whiting, wearing eyeglasses and a bonnet.
In Griswold, R.W. The Republican Court, or, American society in the days of Washington. New and rev. ed. (New York, 1856), frontispiece., Three-quarter length portrait of Mrs. Washington, standing outdoors, surrounded by foliage.
In Griswold, R.W. The Republican Court, or, American society in the days of Washington. New and rev. ed. (New York, 1856), plate preceding p. 219., Three-quarter length portrait of Mrs. Randolph, seated, with her arms crossed in her lap, her right hand holding a rose, in front of a window through which a mountain and a river are visible.
In Rankin, Mary. The daughter of affliction (Dayton, 1858), frontispiece., Waist-length portrait of the invalid, with a blanket across her lap., "Your sister in Christ, Mary Rankin".
In Lee, R.H. Memoir of the life of Harriet Preble (New York, 1856), frontispiece., Three-quarter length portrait of the teacher, seated at a table with a book in her lap.
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.
Waist-length portrait of Mrs. Prosser, wearing muff., In Frank Leslie’s illustrated newspaper, vol. 3, no. 75 (May 16, 1857), p. 368., Mrs. Prosser was a witness in the Burdell murder trial., Also known as Caroline Weathington. Cf. New York daily tribune (Feb. 6, 1857), p. 6.
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 Griswold, R.W. The Republican Court, or, American society in the days of Washington. New and rev. ed. (New York, 1856), plate preceding p. 113., Three-quarter length portrait of Mrs. King seated in front of drapery and architectural elements.
In Hale, S. J. Woman's record (New York, 1853), p. 712., Another portrait appears in: Leslie, E., ed. The gift: a Christmas and new year's present for 1836, frontispiece., Bust-length portrait of the actress looking over her left shoulder.
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.
Waist-length portrait of the actress, seated, wearing flowers in her hair., In Frank Leslie’s illustrated newspaper, vol. 3, no. 53 (Dec. 3, 1856), p. 32., Laura Keene was a popular actress and theater manager, best known for acting in the production of Our American Cousin on the night of President Lincoln’s assassination., Another portrait appears in: Frank Leslie’s illustrated newspaper, vol. 4, no. 103 (Nov. 21, 1857), p. 397.
In Griswold, R.W. The Republican Court, or, American society in the days of Washington. New and rev. ed. (New York, 1856), plate preceding p. 295., Cornelia Clinton Genet was the daughter of New York Gov. George Clinton (1739-1812) and the wife of Edmond-Charles Genêt (1763-1834)., Three-quarter length portrait of Mme. Genet standing standing in front of a natural landscape, her arms folded at her waist.
In The Ladies' Repository (July, 1858), plate preceding p. 385. "Engraved expressly for the Ladies Repository.", Waist-length portrait of Mrs. Garrett.
In Lee, L. P. History of the Spirit Lake massacre! / 8th March, 1857, and of Miss Abigail Gardiner's three month's captivity among the Indians (New Britain, CT, 1857), p.5., Facsimile signature: Abagail Gardner., Another illustration depicting Gardner appears in: Lee, L. P. History of the Spirit Lake massacre! (New Britain, CT, 1857), p. 35; another portrait appears in: Gardner-Sharp, A. History of the Spirit Lake massacre (Des Moines, 1885), frontispiece, and another illlustration depicting Gardner appears on plate facing p. 63., Three-quarter length portrait of a seated Mrs. Gardner, wearing cross necklace.
Waist-length seated portrait of the actress holding a book., In The American phrenological journal, vol. 29 (Feb., 1859), p. 25., Ernestina Katherine Louise Marie Ritter, who went by the stage name Ada Clifton, was a popular actress in the mid-nineteenth century.
In Cooke, H.B. Memories of my life work / the autobiography of Mrs. Harriet B. Cooke (New York: 1858), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: H. B. Cooke., Waist-length portrait of the educator, wearing a bonnet.
In Congdon, C.M. Guardian angel (Auburn, N.Y., 1856), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: Yours most truly Carrie M. Congdon., Waist-length recumbent portrait of the writer, holding a pencil at an invalid's writing desk, with books nearby. Peacock feathers along top of image.
In Maria Cheeseman, or, The candy-girl (Philadelphia, 1857), vignette on added engraved title page., Waist-length portrait of the orphan, who returned to her grandparents in England after having been aided by missionaries who found her selling items on Sunday in New York City.
Full-length portraits of the victims in the parlor. The illustration depicts the scene of the crime the morning after the murders. Mrs. Honora Shaw, closest to the door, lies on her back with her arms flailed upward. Mrs. Ellen Lynch lies across the room, barefoot and on her side., In The Life and adventures of Arthur Spring; the murderer of Mrs. Ellen Lynch and Mrs. Honora Shaw (Philadelphia, 1853), p. 53., Mrs. Ellen Lynch and Mrs. Honora Shaw were murdered by Mr. Arthur Spring, whom they had grown up with in Ireland, on the night of March 10th, 1853. Mr. Spring murdered the sisters in the home that they shared in an attempt to rob them of less than one hundred dollars.
In Griswold, R.W. The Republican Court, or, American society in the days of Washington. New and rev. ed. (New York, 1856), plate preceding p. 91., Waist-length portrait of Mrs. Smith, standing in front of a window partially covered with drapery, wearing a pearl headband and holding a fur muff. Obscure landscape scene visible through window.
In Griswold, R.W. The Republican Court, or, American society in the days of Washington. New and rev. ed. (New York, 1856), plate preceding p. 413., Three-quarter length portrait of Mrs. Stewart wearing pearls in her hair and holding a folded fan in her right hand. The miniature on her left wrist is probably a portrait of her father; the one on her right, her husband. Cf. Robin J. Frank. Love and loss (2000), p. 21.
In Green, F.H. Biography of Mrs. Semantha Mettler, the clairvoyant (New York, 1853), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: Semantha Mettler., Waist-length portrait of the medium, wearing a dress with a lace collar.
In Lectures of Lola Montez (Countess of Landsfeld) including her autobiography (New York, 1858), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: Lola Montez., Lola Montez was born in Ireland and spent her childhood in India, Scotland, France, and England. As an adult, she trained as a dancer and traveled the royal courts of Europe. She had a forceful, captivating personality, and at times she wielded considerable political influence, particularly in Bavaria, where she was the mistress of King Ludwig I. Later in life, she moved to America, where she performed as a dancer, actress, and lecturer. In one of her public lectures, she proclaimed, "It takes most women two-thirds of their lifetime to discover, that men may be amused by, without respecting them; and every woman may make up her mind that to be really respected, she must possess merit, she must have accomplishments of mind and heart, and there can be no real beauty without these."--P. 121-122., Another portrait appears in: Gleason's pictorial drawing-room companion, vol. 2, no. 16, (April 17, 1852), p. 249., Bust-length portrait of Montez., Another portrait (entitled "Morning") appears in: Snow flake (1849), frontispiece. The sitter is identified as Lola Montez on the basis of a portrait by Jules Laure; the painting is now located in the collection of the Leeds Castle Foundation, Maidstone, Kent, UK.
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.
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 Lander, Meta. Light on the dark river (Boston, 1854), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: Yours affectionately, Henrietta., Shoulder-length portrait of Mrs. Hamlin.
In Griswold, R.W. The Republican Court, or, American society in the days of Washington. New and rev. ed. (New York, 1856), plate preceding p. 55., Three-quarter length portrait of Mrs. Hamilton, seated in front of a curtain, holding a folded fan, hands resting in her lap., Another portrait appears in Hunt, L. The American biographical sketch book (New York, 1848), plate opposite p. 326.
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 Life and letters of Miss Mary C. Greenleaf (Boston, 1858), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: M.C. Greenleaf., Bust-length portrait of Miss Greenleaf.
In Griswold, R.W. The Republican Court, or, American society in the days of Washington. New and rev. ed. (New York, 1856), plate preceding p. 345., Three-quarter length portrait of Mrs. Goodrich in profile, with a ribbon in her hair, standing in front of architectural elements with a distant landscape visible in the background.
In Ballou's pictorial drawing-room companion, vol. 8, no. 12 (Mar. 24, 1855), p. 177. "Mr. Rowse's design illustrates the scene in the first act of Mr. Sargent's new tragedy"., Full-length portrait of Dean, acting in a scene with two other figures, with a cottage in a woodland setting in the background.
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.
Full-length portrait of the actress saluting in costume as Marie from Donizetti’s opera, “La Figlia del Reggimento.” Her accoutrements include a canteen, top hat, and a drum., In Frank Leslie’s illustrated newspaper, vol. 3, no. 68 (Mar. 28, 1857), p. 264., Cora De Wilhorst was an opera singer and a native New Yorker.
Bust-length portrait of the reformer with her right hand at her chin., In The American phrenological journal, vol. 18 (July, 1853), p. 12., Mrs. Paulina Wright Davis was a prominent abolitionist and suffragist as well as a lecturer in various scientific fields, such as anatomy and physiology.
In Day, M. L. Incidents in the life of a blind girl (Baltimore, 1859), frontispiece., Mary Day studied at the Maryland Institution for the Instruction of the Blind, now the Maryland School for the Blind., Bust-length portrait of Mary Day.
In Hale, S.J. Woman's record (Philadelphia, 1855), p. 592. "Illustrated by two hundred and thirty portraits engraved on wood by Lossing and Barritt.", Laura Bridgman, who lost all sense of hearing, sight, and smell after contracting smallpox in her early childhood, went on to become the first educated deaf-blind person. Aided by the patience and dedication of her teacher, Samuel Gridley Howe, she was able to learn to read, write, sign, and perform many other tasks., Other portraits appear in: The prisoner's friend, no. 3 (Nov., 1848), frontispiece; Phrenological and physiological almanac, for 1849 (New York, 1848), p. 40; Jones, A.D. The American portrait gallery (New York, 1855), p. [707]., Waist-length portrait of Bridgman, wearing an eye covering.
Full-length portrait of the young girl holding her hands across her waist., In The American phrenological journal, vol. 29 (Jan., 1859), p. 1., At the age of four Ella Burns was a national celebrity, renowned for her captivating public readings and poetry recitations., “Without ever having been taught spelling or the alphabet, but having herself picked up a knowledge of words by intuitive quickness of eye, [Ella] takes any book of poetry presented to her and reads verses she has never before seen, with a cadence and a pronunciation which do the fullest justice to the sense and rhythm.”--P. 2.
In Locke, J.E. The recalled (Boston, 1854), frontispiece., Facsimile signature: Yrs. Very truly J. Ermina Locke., Waist-length portrait of the poet, wearing a crucifix.
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.
In Ballou's pictorial drawing-room companion, v. 16, no. 20 (May 14, 1859), p. 305., “The accompanying engraving of the already famous “Fairy Children” is from a drawing made expressly for us by Mr. Homer [i.e., Winslow Homer] ….”, Dollie Dutton, known as the “Little Fairy,” had a stage career as a singer and a dancer. She and her sister Etta performed together before Etta died at the age of eight., Full-length standing portraits of diminutive Etta and Dollie Dutton, with a significantly taller child standing between them.
In Chapin, J.R. The historical picture gallery (Boston, 1856), p. 471., Partially obscured full-length portrait of the young girl, who is being held by a Native American holding a tomahawk over his head; he is trying to fend off a woman (her mother, Ruth Tripp Slocum?), who is kneeling before him with her right arm outstretched toward the child; a second child is on the floor next to them; a second woman and a recumbent body are visible in the background.