Pater Patriae
(Re:discovery Exhibition) "Surrounding Washington's image are the allegorical figures of Columbia, Minerva, Mars, Fame, Liberty, and Truth. The war veteran in the foreground represents the "grief of all the army of American for the loss of their beloved General and Commander in Chief"."
"Pater Patriae
Etching and engraving by Enoch G. Gridley (active ca. 1803-1813) after John Coles Jr. and Edward Savage (1761-1817), each American; ca. 1800
According to a contemporary broadside, this print memorialized "the great and noble Deeds of the Father of His Country". The woman near the lower-left corner was described as representing "the Grief of all America" upon George Washington's death.
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley DeForest Scott, 1985
Object #: RP-440; SC-2"
Published ReferencesWendy Wick, George Washington: An American Icon, (Washington D.C.: The Smithsonian Institution, 1982), 151.
Charles Henry Hart, Catalogue of the Engraved Portraits of Washington (New York: Grolier Club of the City of New York, 1904), 104-105.
William Spohn Baker, The Engraved Portraits of Washington with Notices of the Originals and Brief Biographical Sketches of the Painters (Philadelphia: Lindsay & Baker, 1880), 190.