Rossiter & Mignot  “The Home of Washington"
Rossiter & Mignot  “The Home of Washington"
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Rossiter & Mignot  “The Home of Washington"
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Rossiter & Mignot  “The Home of Washington"

Rossiter & Mignot “The Home of Washington"

Regular price
$950
Sale price
$950
Regular price
Sold
Unit price
per 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

T.P. Rossiter and L.R. Mignot.  “The Home of Washington.” 

New York: Henry T. Williams [1863].  18 7/8 x 29 7/8.  Engraved by Thomas Oldham Barlow.  Short repaired tear left hand margin and diagonal crease bottom right margin corner not affecting image.  Else, very good condition.  

A classic American historical print, with a scene which expresses the ideals of the American gentleman farmer and which features more than meets the eye at first glance.  This pleasing picture shows George Washington on the porch of the East Front of Mount Vernon with the Potomac River in the background.  The bucolic setting and at leisure figures had a serious message for the print’s audience.  Issued during the American Civil War, the print represents the ideal for America from a Northern perspective.  Washington is conversing with John Jay, principal author of The Federalist Papers and thus a representative of the position supporting centralized power for the federal government.  The elements of peace and family are present with the gentlemen in relaxed conversation and the ladies engaged in polite activities, while two children play with a toy cannon nearby.  The message is that it would be better that war should be only an imaginary event, the powder horn lying on the grass in the foreground and labeled “1776,” representing the last war that American should have had to fight.  To see the parallels of Washington with Robert E. Lee, also a Virginian and a general, is to recognize the propaganda value of this well executed print.  While Lee was leading the Confederate insurrection, the ‘father of his country’ is shown as a uniting factor between North and South.