Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "
Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "
Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "
Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "
Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "
Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "
Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "
Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "
Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "
Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "
Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "
Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "

Rare! Pre- Civil War Political Art Piece-Etching "The Great Compromise "

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For any political buff!!! This piece is quite large. Great for office! Attorney, Lawyer, Politician, Senate, Senator, House of Representatives, Democrat, Republican, GOP, President

"The Great Compromise"

Title: The United States Senate, A.D. 1850.
Artist/Maker: Robert E. Whitechurch
after Peter Frederick Rothermel
William Smith
Date1855
MediumEngraving, hand-colored

Object Description

The United States Senate, A.D. 1850, depicts the Golden Era of the Senate in the Old Senate Chamber, site of many of the institution’s most historic debates and deliberations. It was in this Chamber that Henry Clay of Kentucky, the "Great Compromiser,"engaged in his last significant act as a senator by introducing the Compromise of 1850. In a desperate attempt to prevent war from erupting, the "Great Triumvirate" of Daniel Webster of Massachusetts, John C. Calhoun of South Carolina, and Clay struggled to balance the interests of the North, South, and West. This image shows all three men: Clay is at center stage presenting the compromise to the Senate, Calhoun stands third from the right, and Webster, head-in-hand, sits at the left. Peter F. Rothermel, who painted the work that served as the basis for Robert Whitechurch’s engraving, used daguerreotypes to produce highly accurate portraits of the senators. By working from photographs, Rothermel produced an image with an immediacy almost as real as the event. Whitechurch attained the same quality in the engraving, which captures the spirit of the 19th-century Senate as no other print does.


Frame 43 1/2 x 49 1/2, image 27 x 33 1/2 w. Has crease and some discoloration consistent with age. Please ask all questions prior to purchase. 

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