Collections record Beta
Collection Record Detail
Object Name
Papier Mache Picture
Object Number
1954-02-45 A,B
Description
Two wooden boards. Painted in center with slightly different floral spray decorations. Gold border around outside of design. Background of paintings brown with wide black border acting as a frame to picture.
Provenance
The Litchfield Manufacturing Company was founded in 1850 by Dr. Josiah G. Beckwith, a local physician and druggist who operated a medical practice and pharmacy on South Street in the building currently occupied by the Post Office. After founding the company Beckwith acquired the property on South Street along the Bantam River that a decade earlier had been used first by Wadsworth, Lounsbury, and Turner, and later by Julius Peck & Co., to manufacture shelf clocks. At the time Beckwith acquired the building it measured 80 feet by 50 feet and was three stories high. In 1851 the Litchfield Manufacturing Company was incorporated and several investors, including circus owner P.T. Barnum, joined the Board of Directors. The company manufactured papier-mache goods such as small tables, card cases, fire screens, portfolios, small boxes, vases and clock cases as well as metal nails, ornamental hinges and clasps for everything from trunks to daguerreotype cases. Trained papier-mache workers from England and Germany were brought to Litchfield to work for the Company and train local men and women in the technique. At its peak, the factory employed over 50 people. The success was short lived however. In 1854, P.T. Barnum persuaded the board to move the factory to East Bridgeport. A year later, due to financial difficulties, the factory closed.
Comment
Phebe Benton was trained as a young girl to paint decorations with papier mache at the Litchfield Manufacturing Company. She was a cousin of the donors.
Category
Date Made
ca. 1870
Dimensions
A: 7" long x 5 1/2" wide B: 7 1/4" long x 6" wide
Materials
Social Tags (experimental)