Subject: United States - Eastern
Period: 1839 (dated)
Publication: American Scenery
Color: Black & White
Size:
7.3 x 4.8 inches
18.5 x 12.2 cm
William Henry Bartlett (1809-1854) was a British landscape artist who traveled the world sketching views for a series of travel volumes issued in the nineteenth century. The most successful of all Bartlett's series was a work written by American author Nathaniel P. Willis and entitled American Scenery: or Land, Lake, and River Illustrations of Transatlantic Nature. The book and its engravings were first issued in a series of parts running to November 1839, and then the entire work was issued in two volumes in January 1840. It was reissued numerous times up to about 1870 and the views were often copied for other publications.
Bartlett made several trips to the United States to gather sketches for American Scenery. He followed the popular tourist route from New York City, up the Hudson and then west to Niagara Falls. Also visiting New England and the mid-Atlantic region, Bartlett produced distinct and well loved images of most of the major sites of interest to tourists, both European and American. This collection of charming prints of the natural wonders, architectural monuments and city landmarks captures the look and feel of the United States in the 1830s as no other and they remain some of the most popular and pleasing prints of America ever issued.
A very attractive group of prints covering picturesque areas along the eastern portion of the United States, including New Hampshire, Washington DC, and New York.
1) The Presidents House, from the River.
2) View from West Point. (Hudson River.)
3) Niagara Falls from the Ferry.
4) The Valley of the Shenandoah, from Jeffersons Rock. (Harper's Ferry.)
5) Black Mountain. (Lake George.)
6) Lake Winnipisseogee, from Red Hill.
7) Saw Mill at Centre Harbour. (Lake Winnipisseogee.)
8) View from Mount Holyoke.
9) The Two Lakes and the Mountain House on the Catskills.
10) View on the Susquehannah, at Liverpool.
References:
Condition: A+
Excellent, with some binding holes in the top margins, well away from the views.