The Steamboat "Peter Crary"
Maker
James Bard
(American, 1815 - 1897)
Collections
ClassificationsPAINTINGS
Date1858
Mediumoil on canvas
Dimensionsframe: 40 x 61 x 3 1/2 in. (101.6 x 154.9 x 8.9 cm.)
DescriptionShip portrait of the steam side-wheeler “Peter Crary” rescuing a becalmed sloop, the “Turkey Glen”.
Inscribedstamped on recto: S. N. Dodges Artist & Painter's Supply Store
Credit LineJonathan and Karin Fielding Collection
Label TextThere is perhaps no better example of how steam power transformed America's waterways in the 19th century than this rendering of the steamboat Peter Crary towing a becalmed sloop, emblem of sail power. Built in 1852, the Peter Crary was, at 86 feet long, of the class of smaller inshore tugboats then revolutionizing shipping practices in New York harbor. The self-taught painter James Bard was America's preeminent chronicler of the steamship. He is said to have documented 4,000 ships over a 77-year career. The accuracy and meticulousness that characterize his works appealed to the ship owners and operators who commissioned them and in whose office and waiting rooms they would have been displayed.Status
On viewObject numberL2015.41.175
James Thornhill
ca. 1718
Object number: 78.14