Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis
That Mount Vernon’s collection includes a portrait of General Cornwallis, the British General who eventually surrendered to Washington in 1781 following his defeat at the Battle of Yorktown, is somewhat surprising. That the miniature was painted in Calcutta, India, by a British woman artist, Diana Dietz Hill, makes it even more fascinating. The miniature was given to Mount Vernon in 2010 by the descendants of the family of Elizabeth Parke Custis Law (1776–1831), Martha Washington’s granddaughter. In 1795 Elizabeth Parke Custis married Thomas Law (1759–1834), who had served in India with the British East India Company from 1773 to 1791. It is likely that Thomas Law, who knew Cornwallis personally, acquired the miniature.
The miniature is framed in a simple casing of lacquered gold alloy over copper, with large amounts of silver. There is no decoration on the reverse.
SignedHill 1786
Published ReferencesJulie Aronson and Marjorie E. Weisman, Perfect Likeness: European and American Portrait Miniatures From the Cincinnati Art Museum (New Haven: Yale, 2006), 209.
W.B. Gerard, Laurence Sterne and the Visual Imagination (Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing Company, 2006).135-173.
Mildred Archer, India and British Portraiture, 1770-1825 (London, New York: Sotheby Parke Bernet, 1979 (398-399).
Catalogue Loan Exhibition Under the Auspices of the National Society of Colonial Dames of America,” The Octagon, Washington, D.C., April 17 – April 21, 1906. (Number 446.)