LEWES
NATIVE
SARAH
FISHER CLAMPITT
DOES
LINCOLN
Sara
Clampitt was born in Lewes 13 August 1817, her father being a river
pilot on the Delaware. Her brother John, also a Lewes native, was
a carpenter and after the Civil War became a surfman for the Life
Saving Service. After moviing with her father to Philadelphia Sara
married the portrait artist Joseph Alexander Ames of Massachusetts 9
September 1845 and the newly weds made a year visit to Italy where
her husband painted a portrait of Pope Pius IX. Returning to America
in the 1850's Sara was active in the anti slave crusade where she
met Abraham Lincoln.
During
the Civil War she was a nurse at a hospital in the Capitol Buildiing
in Washington and was an occasional visitor to the White House on
duties and had suggested to the President to have her do a sculpture
of him which required a photograph of him for her to work from. This
photograph was made by Alexander Gardener in his studio at 7th &
D Streets and a photo of Lincoln staring directly into the camera was
the one chosen for the model. This photo was observed as the most
interesting ever taken of Lincoln, it's rugged homeliness, the deep
attraction of suffering and sympathy showing Lincoln's true picture
for his bust. Daniel Chester French used the Gardner photograph as a
model for the statue in the Lincoln Memorial. The Clampitt bust of
Lincoln was purchased by the Federal government in 1868 and placed in
the Capitol , third floor east corridor of the Senate Wing. Copies
are in the Massachusetts statehouse, three museums in Massachusetts
and the Woodmere Art Museum in Philadelphia. Sara died 8 March 1901
in Washington, D.C. She and her husband were parents of Emily
Girdlestone Ames, Emma Ames, Josephine Ames, Robert Fisher Ames and
Sophia Marguerite Ames, all being descendents of Major John Whistler,
a British soldier in the American Revolution, who returned to
America to enlist in the U. S. Army duriing War of 1812 and served in
the American west against the native Indians.
Abstract
from Delaware Coast News, Delaware Diary by Michael Morgan
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