| Object ID |
N0339.1955 |
| Title |
Samuel Nelson (1792-1873) |
| Artist |
Morse, Samuel Finley Breese |
| Object Name |
Painting |
| Early Date |
1822 |
| Late Date |
1832 |
| Exhibit label line3 |
Samuel F.B. Morse painted Samuel Nelson (1792-1873) and his wife Catherine Ann Russell Nelson (1798-1875) in the late 1820s when Morse spent the summer in Cherry Valley, New York, at the invitation of his cousin, James Otis Morse. A leading figure in Cooperstown, Samuel Nelson had a long, successful law career. He was Chief Justice of the State Supreme Court and later served as Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. His summer law office is now located at The Farmers' Museum (the sister museum to Fenimore Art Museum) in Cooperstown.
Best remembered as the inventor of the Morse code and the telegraph, Morse originally intended to be an artist. He studied with Benjamin West in London and aspired to be a history painter. However, finding that the majority of his commissions were for portraiture, he stopped painting in 1837. |
| Description |
Samuel Nelson, by Samuel F.B. Morse. |
| Classification |
Academic Art--Painting/Drawing--Portraits--Human |
| Dimensions |
H-30 W-25 inches |
| Material |
Oil on canvas |
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Prior written permission is required for any reproduction, redistribution, publication, or other use of the images in any media, including but not limited to, printed or electronic media. Contact the Office of the Registrar, New York State Historical Association, PO Box 800, Cooperstown, NY 13326, (607) 547-1444, to request permission.    
Last modified on: November 04, 2005
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