Daniel Folger 7 BIGELOW
Photo of the artist at work.
See Adirondack Life article
for example of his work and more information.
Also see Page 2 for more information
on Daniel Folger 7 Bigelow.
Also see Page 4 for 1997 information
from Chicago Art Institute.
Also see Page 5 for new article
(1998) on Daniel Folger Bigelow.
Also see Page 7 for new article
(from Forge 2021)
Also see Page 3a for artwork by
Daniel Folger Bigelow.
See "Bible" of Daniel Folger
Bigelow
15146.33 Daniel Folger 7
BIGELOW, son of Nathan 6
(Nathan 5,John 4,John
3,Samuel 2,
John 1), and Clarinda
Folger (BARKER) BIGELOW, was born 22 July 1823 Peru, Clinton
co, NY. He married 01 November 1865 Charlotte "Lottie" BARNES (see below) of Schuyler Falls,
Clinton, NY. She was born 20 July 1884 in Schuyler Falls, the
daughter of Dr. Melvin Allen and Phoebe (Edgarton) Barnes. Daniel
was a landscape painter and became associated with G.P.A. Healy and
Associates who founded the Chicago Academy of Design. They resided
in Peru, NY and later, (1858), Chicago. He died in Chicago 14 July
1910, age 87. There is a stone in the New Schuyler Falls cemetery on
Felton Road, that lists Charlotte Barnes Bigelow 1844-1940, "buried
in Chicago". The stone that Charlotte is inscribed also has "Melvin
Allen Barnes and Phebe Edgerton". This same Schuyler Falls cemetery
has the headstone of Daniel's parents. Legend: {Nathan Bigelow; died
May 16, 1860 ; age 67. Clarinda F Barker; his wife; died June 20,
1874; age 78}
Children of Daniel Folger and Charlotte (BARNES) BIGELOW:
15146.331 Folger Allen, b 11 March 1868
Chicago, IL; died 16 Sept 1891 Chicago from accidental gunshot.
15146.332 Florence Edgerton "Daisy",
b 14 Feb 1871 Chicago; d 26 Apr 1951; She painted flowers with
watercolors and exhibited in several galleries around the
Chicago.. She taught art at Hyde Park High School in Chicago for
more than 40 years. (see below)
15146.333 Louis Barnes, b 16 May
1884 Chicago; d 16 Jan 1974; m (1) 16 May 1908 Frances Catherine
Baker; m (2) 21 Nov 1942 Katharine Underhill (DFB
Bible); 4 children with Frances.(see
below)(see below)
Sources:
Howe, Bigelow Family of America pages 477 - 478;
Bigelow Family Genealogy Vol II page 34;
Subject: Daniel Folger Bigelow
Date: Fri, 1 Aug 2008 10:02:25 EDT
From: NMOO468@aol.com
Rod,
Many thanks for forwarding the link. It has a wealth of
great information and I thank you again for sharing it with me, it
will aid greatly in my research! What originally piqued my
interest was recently going through my old Adirondack Life library
and came across the article in the Winter 1971 issue on Daniel
Folger which I had somehow missed previously. I then decided to
add Mr. Folger to my list of accomplished Clinton County citizens
both past and present that I am currently researching. Based on
the original photo in Adirondack Life and the subsequent photos
kindly provided by your link I was able to locate the original
home (I had driven by it many times over the years).
Again, I appreciate your kind assistance! Nancy M.
One of Daniel's landscapes was chosen and displayed at :
THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION 1893 (link no longer valid)
(../rod2005b/lottie1.jpg) see Lottie
Barnes
Charlotte "Lottie" (Barnes) Bigelow was born 20 July 1884
in Schuyler Falls, the daughter of Dr. Melvin Allen and Phoebe
(Edgarton) Barnes.
Dr. Melvin Allen Barnes was born about 1811 and died 30 July 1889
at Schuyler Falls in the 78th year of his age. (incription from
Daniel's Bible). Also inscribed in Bible: "Died at
Plattsburgh, NY, Phoebe Edgarton Barnes, March 10th, 1903; Born
at Chazy, NY June 17th, 1824. Mother of Charlotte M. Barnes
Bigelow". Also: " Died at Schuyler Falls, NY, Monday at
5:00 PM, July 12th, 1897. Phoebe Elizabeth Barnes - Lyon, aged
44 yrs, 9 mos, Born at same place Friday 8:00 PM Oct. 21st,
1853. Youngest sister of Charlotte M. Barnes Bigelow."
Charlotte was a descendant of Ethan Allen
of Vermont and Daniel was a descendant of Benjamin Franklin,
through his mother's Folger family.
Note:
Subject: Caroline Bigelow Gregorovius
Date: Wed, 11 Oct 2000 14:17:23 -0400
From: "Pat Zima" < patz@inna.net >
Quite by accident I stumbled upon your web page as I was
researching my Grandfathers uncle, Ferdinand Gregorovius. I
thank you for the information on D. F. Bigelow and Folger
Bigelow. Aunt Caroline had given one oil painting to me and
I inherited three others when my aunt, Dorothy Gregorovius
died. I guess I should have begun by saying that George
Gregorovius was my mother's brother.
We have lost touch and assume that Caroline has passed away.
Is she buried with George in Plattsburgh?
Pat Zima or patz@inna.net
Caroline died 05 July 2003 in Plattsburgh CVPH; burial in
Schuyler Falls ...............................ROD
Note2:
Subject: Geneology
Date: Sat, 16 Mar 2002 16:34:25 -0500
From: "Richard Tunstall" <
rltunst@charter.net >
I did a google search on my great grandfather, DF Bigelow, and
eventually came across your name. My Mother's father
was Louis Barnes Bigelow, who was DF Bigelow's son. My mother told
the story many times of the tragic death of Folger
Allen Bigelow. I have paintings by both Daniel Folger and Folger
Allen Bigelow.
I would like to hear from you.
Feinberg Library Special Collections:
Call Numbers: MF D4
Last Updated: 1998-05-13 00:00:00
Author:
Title: THE ARTIST BIGELOW ...
Subtitle:
Place of Publication: PLATTSBURGH SENTINEL
Publisher:
Date of Publication: 3/31/1876
Extent of Information: P. 2, COL. 4
Physical Information:
Summary:
Tracings: BIGELOW, D F--PAINTERS AND PAINTINGS
Obituary of Daniel Folger BIGELOW (below)
(continued) He was one of the pioneers of art in the
West. He came to Chicago when the dialect of art was almost an
unknown tongue in this section of the country, save for the few who
had learned to speak it on occasional voyages to Europe, when such a
voyage was an event in the life of a man long to be treasured up and
talked about. He was without question, one of the most picturesque
figures in the art world of this country, noted not only for his age
but also for the long lasting vitality and freshness of mind and
heart and mind with which he was endowed.
So far back do the earlier
associations of Chicago's late veteran painter go that they may be
said to have mingled with the twilight of the dawn of art in
America. He was born in Peru, Clinton, NY in 1823 of Quacker
descent, and through his mother Abigail Folger was related to
Benjamin FRANKLIN. His father fought in the War of 1812, and later
proud of his son's talent, placed him with the sculptor Ashel
POWERS, a cousin of Hiram POWERS. Mr. BIGELOW said that he owed his
delicacy of coloring and treatment to this artist's influence.
During his pre-Chicago days he was associated with the Hudson School
of Art and the art of Casselier, Gifford, Shattuck, and the Hart
Brothers. The influnce of that school clung to him in all his
subsequent work.
At 35 Bigelow decided he wanted to
come west. Arriving in Chicago in 1858, he took a studio in the
Crosby Opera House, in Washington street, between Dearborn and
State, which was then the leading theater of the city. During the
immediately subsequent period of his career, Bigelow was associated
with the historic group of artists led by G.P.A. Healy, and of which
J.H. Drury and Mrs. L.H. St John were distinguished members. In
association with them, organized the Academy of Design, which later
became the Art Institute of Chicago. He was one of the small group
of artists who, as early as 1867, in spite of the barrenness of the
site, had the hardihood to organize an academy of design, which
since then has flowered in the handsome institution in grant Park
and has proved to be the mother of art in the West. Bigelow had the
happiness of living to see the growth and success of the idea of
which he was in part the originator and one of the warmest of
friends and protectors. That the Institute honored him with all the
enthusiasm of which it was capable was to be expected, and was a
fact. He never missed exhibiting and his pictures were in demand.
Needless to say that he was fully represented in retrospective
exhibitions of Chicago artists. A few years ago the veteran went
east for a sojourn in the country of his birth a brought back a
number of sketches. Among the most liberal of his buyers were the
various women's clubs of the city.
In the beginning of his career
Bigelow thought he had an inspiration portrait work and actually did
some clever things at that time but he later gave up that notion and
centered himself on landscape in which he persisted with success to
the end of his life. He not only painted, but he had a philosophy
which he did his best to impress on the young American painters who
came within the sphere of his influence. His advice to all such was
not to go abroad for their subjects. He taught that American scenes
were the proper and the most fruitful for the development of native
talent. His own boyhood and youth were spent in the shadow of the
Adrondacks, and many of his later paintings were the result of
sketches made by him at that plastic time of his life. The beauty of
American scenes was not surpassed, he held, in any country of the
world.
In the intervals of his busy life Bigelow
would now and then take a commission for painting the home of some
Chicago friend, and at those times, he has reproduced the residences
of the late Judge Skinner, a pioneer Chicago jurist, Edward Teal,
Edward Isham, the Keith brothers and a few others.
He was fond of talking of the early days of
his life in Chicago, and few were the notable old residents who
could speak more charmingly or with more vivid effect than he.
BIRTHPLACE OF D.F.B.--- July 22, 1823 - Peru, NY More Info can be
found on page 2.
Two views of house Daniel moved to at 4 years old (photos 2005)
This house is on the Clark Calkins Road, outside Peru
A picture of the house he moved to at 4 years
old can be found on
Nathan (6) as
well.
Note4:
Subject: L H Barnes
Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2003 17:23:45 EST
From: T Eger Tibbz58@aol.com
I am trying to find out information on an artist by the
name of L.H. Barnes. I came across this website for Louis
Barnes Bigelow and am wondering if this may be the same
person. L H Barnes painted a portrait of my
grandmother in Savannah GA in 1944-45. He also painted portraits
of Hollywood stars and the pope. He died a
pauper in Savannah, Ga, July 1945 he was 61 years old when he
died. He was from Chicago and had been a
professor there. My father is trying to find information on
L H Barnes. The obit he has of him said that no
family could be found when he died. My grandfather an
officer in the Salvation Army in Savannah had been
taking care of him before he died.
Is this the Louis Barnes in your family
tree? \ T Eger
Note5:
From: Bill Hobbs Vandy65@aol.com
Date: 12/15/2003
Dear Rod,
While searching the Internet
for info on D. F. Bigelow I accessed your webpage. I bought a
Bigelow oil painting outside of Richmond, Va. this weekend
that came from an Antique dealers estate. The dealer had lived
in Virginia Beach, Va. for 30 years after moving from Boston,
Mass. The painting which measured 7" by 10" was in a gold
frame that was inclosed in a glass covered shadow box. Someone
though it was valuable and wanted to protect the surface which
appears to be like new.
The painting is almost identical to the one titled River Scene
on your webpage with the exception that all the trees are
green, a few less rocks, and in my painting there are
sailboats on the water. On the back of the stretcher in pencil
are the words "Near Westport,New York." Westport is on the
west shore of Lake Champlain so I think the mountains are the
Green Mountains of Vermont and the water is actually Lake
Champlain. Look like he painted more than one of the same
setting. Thought you might be interested in all this info.
Bill Hobbs
Vandy65@aol.com
Modified - 11/27/2005
(c) Copyright 2005 Bigelow Society, Inc. All
rights reserved.
Rod Bigelow - Director
< rodbigelow@netzero.net >
Rod Bigelow (Roger Jon12 BIGELOW)
Box 13 Chazy Lake
Dannemora, N.Y. 12929
<
rodbigelow@netzero.net >
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