Philip Reed (sculptor) explained

Philip Reed
Birth Date:1820
Birth Place:South Carolina
Death Place:Washington, D.C.
Resting Place:National Harmony Memorial Park in Landover, Maryland
Other Names:Philip Reid, before emancipation
Occupation:Sculptor
Notable Works:Statues of George Washington and Andrew Jackson, and the Statue of Freedom

Philip Reed, known as Philip Reid before he was emancipated (– February 6, 1892), was an African American master craftsman who worked at the foundries of self-taught sculptor Clark Mills. There, historical monuments such as the 1853 equestrian statue of Andrew Jackson in Lafayette Square, near the White House in Washington, D.C., the 1860 equestrian statue of George Washington in Washington Circle, and the 1863 Statue of Freedom in Washington, D.C., were created.

He was born in c. 1820 into slavery in South Carolina's historic city of Charleston. Reed was already recognized for his talents in the foundry industry when he began working as an enslaved apprentice to Mills in 1842.

Reed was emancipated on April 16, 1862, under the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act. After his emancipation, he assisted Mills in installing the Statue of Freedom atop the United States Capitol, which was completed on December 2, 1863. In the 1860s, after having worked at the foundry for almost two decades, Reed's skills in working with bronze casting were recognized. In 1928, Tennessee Representative Finis J. Garrett presented a paper honoring Reed for his "faithful service and genius", and describing the key role he had played in casting the statue of Freedom, that is now part of the Congressional Record.

Personal life

He was born in c. 1820 into slavery in South Carolina and at about the age of 22, he was purchased by a sculptor, Clark Mills, in Charleston for $700 or $1,200. Seen by Mills to have an "evident talent for business", Reed became his apprentice.[1] Reed remained enslaved to Mills for over twenty years. During that time, he did not learn to read or write. After he was freed his surname was spelled "Reed" in census and other public records.[2]

Reed settled in Washington, D.C., living on 3rd and C Street SW near the National Mall. He married Jane Brown, a housekeeper, on June 3, 1862 and they had a son named Henry Reed about 1868.[3] In 1879, he married Mary Marshall, a laundress.[3]

Reed died on February 6, 1892, and after having been moved twice, his remains were interred at National Harmony Memorial Park in Landover, Maryland, in 1960. A memorial plaque honoring Philip Reed was unveiled on April 16, 2014—the 152nd anniversary of Emancipation in Washington, D.C. at the cemetery. It reads,

Enslaved craftsman

The Clark Mills Studio, #51 Broad Street, in Charleston, South Carolina. North Broad Street elevation.At the time that Reed was purchased to become Clark Mill's apprentice, Charleston had more skilled craftsmen and enslaved craftsmen apprentices than any other city in the country. Generally, craftsmen had some freedom that was not afforded to domestic and agricultural enslaved people. Reed traveled with Mills to work. He may have had been able to keep a portion of earnings if he was hired out to wealthy planters. As a craftsman, he may have also been allowed to shop for materials and meet free and enslaved African Americans in his community.

Clark Mills lived in Charleston at 51 Broad Street, where he had his studio. Reed's on-the-job training included plastering and sculpting. He also learned basic engineering. After receiving commissions in Washington, D.C., Mills established a residence and studio on Bladensburg Road, NE in the District of Columbia in 1860.

Emancipation

Reed was emancipated in 1863, after President Abraham Lincoln signed the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act on April 16, 1862.[4] [5] When Mills petitioned for compensation, a right afforded to district slave owners, Reed was described as healthy 42-year-old man who was a good, healthy workman. He further stated that Reed demonstrated "evident talent for the business in which [Mills] was engaged" at his steel foundry.

After he was emancipated, Reed worked as a plasterer in Washington, D.C.

Works

Equestrian statue of Andrew Jackson (1853)

See main article: Equestrian statue of Andrew Jackson (Washington, D.C.).

In 1848, the Jackson Monument Committee commissioned Mills, a self-taught sculptor to create the equestrian statue of Andrew Jackson which is now in Lafayette Square, near the White House in Washington, D.C.[6]

Mills moved to Washington after winning the competition and brought Reed and his other workmen with him. They erected a temporary foundry south of the White House. Mills with the assistance of Reed and laborers, produced six castings of the equestrian statue.[7] In 1852, the casting was complete. The Architect of the Capitol said that they had produced "first bronze statue ever cast in America" through "trial and error". This "accomplishment was extraordinary due to the absence of any formal training of any of the participants." It has been described as the first equestrian statue made in America, and possibly the first equestrian statue of a horse rearing on two legs in which no additional support was added.

Equestrian statue of George Washington (1860)

See main article: Equestrian statue of George Washington (Washington Circle).

The $60,000 equestrian statue was executed by Mills in his studio and foundry. The statue was dedicated in 1860, by then President James Buchanan.[8]

The Statue of Freedom (1863)

Largely because of the impact of the equestrian statues, in May 1860, Jefferson Davis, then-Secretary of War under President Franklin Pierce—who was responsible for public works including the expansion of the U.S. Capitol[9] —awarded the contract to cast Thomas Crawford's Freedom statue to Mills.[10] [11]

Commissioned in 1855, the initial full-size plaster model of Freedom was completed by American sculptor Crawford in his studio in Rome, Italy. He died suddenly in 1857. A plaster model was cast and divided into five main sections for transport in separate crates. Crawford's widow shipped the model to Washington where it was to be cast into bronze. The crates arrived in late March 1859. An Italian craftsman was hired to assemble the five sections and it was put on display in the Old Hall of the House, now National Statuary Hall.

The fragile full-scale plaster model needed to be separated again into its five main sections to move it from the old House Chamber to Mills' foundry for casting.[12] According to Mills' son Fisk, the Italian artisan refused to dismantle it until he got a major raise and a long-term contract. He had covered the seams of the sections with a layer of plaster that made them impossible to detect. He thought he was the only one capable of separating the delicate sections without harming them. Reed was able to find the seams by the ingenious use of an iron ring attached to the head of the figure and a block and tackle.[12] He gently lifted the huge plaster model enough to crack the seals at the seams so he could reach the bolts inside. The statue was successfully separated into its five sections and carefully transported to Mills' Foundry.[13]

Mills and his workmen began casting the statue in June 1860 at Mills Foundry—a large octagon-shaped studio and foundry on Bladensburg Road NE, District of Columbia.[6] The government rented the foundry for $400 a month and supplied the materials, fuel and labor to cast the statue. Because of this arrangement, the names of the craftsmen and laborers were recorded each day in Mills' monthly report. Philip Reed was listed as a "laborer". There is no evidence that any of other men listed as laborers were black or enslaved. Mills received the government payment for Reed's work, which amounted to $1.25 a day, with the exception of Sundays, when Reed was paid directly. The other workmen were paid $1 a day. Only Philip Reed was paid directly by the government for working on 33 Sundays.

The work on Freedom continued against the backdrop of the American Civil War (1861–1865). On December 2, 1863, the "final piece of the iconic Statue of Freedom" was installed "atop the new Capitol Dome" amid great celebration and a 35-gun salute.[14]

The 38th Congress (1863–1865) convened five days after Freedom had been installed, to "face and settle the most important questions of the century", and "passed the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which—when adopted by the states—abolished slavery and involuntary servitude.[14]

Legacy

In 1863, with the Statue of Freedom newly installed on the Capital, a newspaper correspondent wrote,

The Senate Historical Office reprinted the quote in their tribute to Reed, "Philip Reid [sic] and the Statue of Freedom" as part of their series, The Civil War: The Senate's Story.[4]

During the 70th United States Congress in 1928, Tennessee Representative, Finis J. Garrett, read a paper and poem by William A. Cox[15]

The Architect of the Capitol described Reed as the "single best known enslaved person associated with the Capitol’s construction history".[16]

Reed was honored for his role to create the capitol dome at the Emancipation Hall at the Capitol Visitor Center along with the plaster cast of the Statue of Freedom. Enslaved laborers who built the Capitol building were also honored.

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sarah . Fling . Philip Reed: Enslaved Artisan in the President's Neighborhood . White House History . May 5, 2023 .
  2. Book: Smolenyak, Megan . The Slave Who Rescued Freedom. Hey, America, Your Roots Are Showing' . Kensington . 2012 . 978-0-8065-3446-6.
  3. Ancestry Magazine . Megan . Smolenyak. The Slave Who Rescued Freedom. June 2009 . June 23, 2020.
  4. Web site: Philip Reid and the Statue of Freedom . U.S. Senate: The Civil War: The Senate's Story. nd . United States Senate Historical Office (SHO). June 22, 2020.
  5. Web site: Philip Reid and the Statue of Freedom . June 22, 2020 . National Council for the Social Studies. 2 . Eugene . Walton . Casting Freedom, 1860–1862. 2005.
  6. Web site: Clark Mills's Foundry. White House Historical Association (WHHA) . nd. June 23, 2020.
  7. Book: Goode, James M. . Outdoor Sculpture of Washington, D.C. . Smithsonian Institution Press . 1974 . 0-87474-138-6.
  8. News: Community remembers history behind George Washington sculpture. https://archive.today/20120715132516/http://media.www.gwhatchet.com/media/storage/paper332/news/2010/02/25/News/Community.Remembers.History.Behind.George.Washington.Sculpture-3879737.shtml. dead. July 15, 2012. Ashley Roberts. The GW Hatchet. February 25, 2010.
  9. Book: Cooper, William J. . William J. Cooper, Jr.

    . William J. Cooper, Jr. . Jefferson Davis, American . Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group . 2000 . 978-0-3077-7264-0 .

  10. Architect of the Capitol et al, Art in the United States Capitol. 1976.
  11. Architect of the Capitol et al, Compilation of Works of Art and Other Objects in the United States Capitol. 1965
  12. Book: Furgurson, Ernest B.. Alfred A. Knopf. 978-0-375-40454-2. Freedom Rising: Washington in the Civil War. 2004.
  13. Book: Wyeth, Samuel Douglas . Wentworth Press. 978-1-362-21461-8. The Federal City, Or, Ins and Abouts of Washington. August 26, 2016 . 1865. This book, which is considered to be culturally important, was reprinted in 2016.
  14. Web site: The Completion of the Statue of Freedom . US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives. June 23, 2020.
  15. Book: Congress, United States. U.S. Government Printing Office. Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the ... Congress. 1928 . June 23, 2020.
  16. Web site: Philip Reid and the Statue of Freedom. Architect of the Capitol. June 23, 2020.