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Maker(s):Hitchcock, Orra White
Culture:American (1796-1863)
Title:print: Turners Falls
Date Made:1835
Type:Print
Materials:paper, ink, watercolor, glass, wood, paint
Place Made:United States; Massachusetts; Boston
Measurements:Sheet: 8 1/8 x 11 1/4 in; 20.6 x 28.6 cm
Accession Number:  HD 91.064
Credit Line:Gift of Mrs. Harold G. Duckworth
Museum Collection:  Historic Deerfield
1991-64t.jpg

Description:
Lithograph on paper titled "TURNER'S FALLS." by Orra White Hitchcock (1796-1863) colored in greens and browns, and in a gilt and silvered frame. The print is inscribed in the lower left, "Mrs. Hitchcock del." and in the lower right, "Pendleton's Lithography Boston." and in the upper right corner, "Plate IX." The daughter of Jarib White and Ruth Sherman White, an affluent farmer in Amherst, Massachusetts, Orra White was educated in boarding schools in South Hadley and Roxbury, excelling in science, art, Latin and Greek. She was working as an assistant instructor at Deerfield Academy when she met her future husband Edward Hitchcock (1793-1864), who held the post of preceptor from 1816-1819, and married in 1821. Considered one of the earliest female artists and illustrators in America, Orra was an accomplished artist who prepared these prints which appeared in "Plates Illustrating the Geology and Scenery of Massachusetts" (two editions, 1833 and 1835) as a supplement for her husband's book, "Report on the Geology, Minerology, Botany and Zoology of Masachusetts" (Amhurst: J.S. and C. Adams, 1833), and in his "Final Report of the Geology of Massachusetts" (Amherst, 1841). The lithographer, William Pendleton, pubished both the 1833 and 1835 editions. Edward Hitchcock, who had been raised in Deerfield and attended Deerfield Academy, moved his family to Amherst where he was appointed Professor of Chemistry and Natural History in 1826, a position he filed until 1845 when he was appointed President and Professor of Natural Theology and Geology. He served as President from 1845 until 1854. During that time, Hitchcock was responsible for Amherst's recovery from extreme financial depression. In 1854 Hitchcock retired from the presidency and became Professor of Natural History and Geology, a position which he held until his death in 1864. The print shows the Connecticut and Deerfield Rivers flowing on each side of a hill with its tree-covered summit and houses near the water in the fields below; a large estuary in the foreground; and another field, road, house, and fence on the bank to the left.

Tags:
landscapes

Link to share this object record:
https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+91.064

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