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Great-grandma's looking glass; by Blanche Nevin and illustrated by Annis Dunbar Jenkins

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo8577
Author
Nevin, Blanche.
Date of Publication
1905.
Call Number
811 N526g
Author
Nevin, Blanche.
Place of Publication
New York
Publisher
Robert Grier Cooke, inc.,
Date of Publication
1905.
Physical Description
14 ø., illus. 24 cm.
Notes
Biographical material by Miriam E. Bixler attached.
The R. Theodore Bixlers' Collection of Lancaster Authors.
Blanche Nevin (1841-1925), artist and poet, was born in Mercersburg, Franklin County, Pennsylvania. She was the daughter of John Williamson Nevin, a theologian, teacher, and minister, and Martha Jenkins, daughter of the politician and iron master at Windsor Forges, Robert Jenkins. When Dr. Nevin became the president of Franklin & Marshall College in 1855, he moved the family to Lancaster. They moved to Windsor Forges (or Windsor Place) from 1856 to 1858, while Dr. Nevin acted as executor of his mother-in-law’s estate, and then moved permanently to Caernarvon Place on Columbia Avenue (the present site of Degel Israel Synagogue). The Nevin children were well-educated and cultivated for society, as their parents had been.Blanche was the nation’s first noteworthy sculptress. In 1889, she sculpted the statue of Revolutionary War General Peter Muhlenberg, which stands in the National Statuary Hall at the U.S. Capitol. She also sculpted the bust of President Woodrow Wilson. Lancastrians are most familiar with her Lion in the Park (1905) at Reservoir Park and her horse drinking fountain (1898) at the intersection of Columbia Avenue and West Orange Street. Blanche composed a number of poems and set several to music; many were inspired by Lancaster County, her travels, and family and friends. Her poems include: “Great-Grandma’s Looking-Glass” (1895), “One Usual Day” (1916), and “To My Door” (1921).She bought Windsor Place in Caernarvon Twp. in 1897, restored the mansion house and the name Windsor Forges, and added a studio. Furniture and other influences from her travels adorned the house and grounds. She also owned a house in Manasquan, New Jersey; spent time with friends in New York and Philadelphia; and traveled a great deal, especially during the winter.Her obituary in a Lancaster County newspaper states, “The simple, unpretentious neighbors of Miss Nevin never questioned her foreign ideas and eccentricities, but accepted her for the true, human qualities which she so abundantly possessed.”
Summary
A poem in which the writer imagines all the joys and sadness this mirror on the wall has seen.
Additional Author
Jenkins, Annis Dunbar,
Location
Lancaster History Library - Book
Call Number
811 N526g
Less detail