New Tomb of Washington
This painting is one of a group of views of Mount Vernon executed by Russell Smith during or just after his 1839 visit to the estate. At the time, George Washington’s old and new tomb at Mount Vernon were revered as national pilgrimage sites, a place where visitors could experience the greatness of Washington and the founding generation. The estate remained privately owned by Washington descendants, and was beginning to show the effects of heavy visitation. Construction on the new tomb--which Washington had left provisions for in his will--did not take place for several decades following his 1799 death. The remains of George and Martha Washington and other family members were interred there in 1831. At the time of Smith's visit, the arched roof which encloses the inner vault was not yet constructed.
It is framed in a reproduction gilt wood frame.
Published ReferencesLydia Mattice Brandt, “Picturing Mount Vernon,” Imprint 38: 1 (Spring 2013), 2-19. (General Reference)
Lydia Mattice Brandt, "Re-living Mount Vernon: Replicas and Memories of America's Most Famous House." Ph.D. diss., University of Virginia, 2011. (General Reference)
Robert W. Torchia, The Smiths: A Family of Philadelphia Artists, (Philadelphia, PA: Schwarz Gallery, 1999). (General Reference)
Virginia E. Lewis, Russell Smith: Romantic Realist (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1956), 74-76.
Virginia E. Lewis, Russell Smith: Romantic Realist, exhibition catalogue (Pittsburgh: Department of Fine Arts, University of Pittsburgh, 1948). (General Reference)
James Albert Wineberger, The Tomb of Washington at Mount Vernon (Washington, D.C.: T. McGill, 1858).(General Reference)