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American Steamboats on the Hudson, passing the Highlands by CURRIER & IVES, pub - 1874

by CURRIER & IVES, pub

American Steamboats on the Hudson, passing the Highlands by CURRIER & IVES, pub - 1874

American Steamboats on the Hudson, passing the Highlands

by CURRIER & IVES, pub

  • Used
New York: Currier & Ives, 1874. Lithograph with hand-coloring by Parsons & Atwater. Two of the "floating palaces" that sailed the Hudson River. This very handsome portrait of two of the great Hudson River steamboats: the Drew and the St. John, was drawn by the artistic team of Charles R. Parsons and Lyman Atwater, who provided Currier & Ives some their best martime scenes and city views. Here Parsons and Atwater capture two of the luxury steamers that plied the Hudson during what could be called the Golden Age of steamboat travel. Once it was discovered that trains could make the trip from Albany to New York in half the time the stemboats could, owners needed to find alternative attractions. One attraction was to race the steamboats, and several great Curriers chronicle that phenomenon, but racing caused overheated boilers and explosions, and a much more lasting and appealing alternative was found in luxury cruises. Launched in the 1860s, during the war, the Drew and St. John (named after Daniel Drew and Alanson J. St. John, founders of the People's Line Steamers) became the favored way to travel to Saratoga Springs and Lake George and back. Elegantly designed and enormous, these boats with grand, inlaid mahogany staircases, huge mirrors and paintings, magnificent restaurants and arcades could serve as symbols of the Gilded Age. All New York society traveled thus. The title, "American Steamboats on the Hudson... "with its seemingly unnecessary "American", is actually a competitive reference to British steamboats, such as the Great Eastern, that were transforming world travel and trade, and maintaining Britain's dominance at sea. The patriotic message is that these beautiful, perfectly tailored and luxurious steamships exceeded the British boats in every way that truly mattered. Gale, 0210; Arthur G. Adams, "The Hudson Through the Years" p. 185.
  • Seller Donald Heald Rare Books US (US)
  • Book Condition Used
  • Quantity Available 1
  • Publisher Currier & Ives
  • Place of Publication New York
  • Date Published 1874
View near Highbridge

View near Highbridge

by [CURRIER & IVES,pub.] PALMER, F. F. (1812-1876)

  • Used
Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1
Seller
New York, New York, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
$475.00

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Description:
New York: Currier & Ives, 1870. Hand-colored lithograph. Medium folio. This bucolic scene was somewhat south of the Highbridge Aqueduct on the Harlem River, in the 1870's still quite rural and pleasant. Fanny Palmer (1812-1876) was the first woman in the United States to work as a professional artist, and to make a living with her art. She produced more Currier and Ives prints than any other artist, and she was the only female in a business that was dominated by men. Painting was not considered a suitable occupation for a woman, nor was lithography. Her story was not uncommon for Victorian wives, who were expected to keep house and be supported by their husbands. She however pursued a career in England and eventually in America, virtually supporting her family as her husband sank deeper into alcoholism and then supporting it in fact when he fell to his death on a hotel stairway in 1857. This nicely composed scene of what was once the northern shore of Manhattan parallels the Harlem River with a dirt… Read More
Item Price
$475.00
The Hudson at Peekskill

The Hudson at Peekskill

by CURRIER & IVES [pub.]

  • Used
Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1
Seller
New York, New York, United States
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
$575.00

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Description:
New York: Currier & Ives, 1860. Hand-colored lithograph. Small folio. Framed. Handsome view of Peekskill Harbor, viewed from a road above. There are several factories in the foreground. A dayliner steamer and full masted ships & sloops sail the river, while several groups of pedestrians stroll the high road above. A horse and carriage are heading down the hill. This view was probably drawn and lithographed by Fanny Palmer. Throughout the 19th century, places along the Hudson River were favorite destinations for New York City dwellers. Conningham 2971, Gale 3215.
Item Price
$575.00