Benoni Irwin
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Benoni Irwin (1840 – August 26, 1896) was an American portraitist.
A pupil of the National Academy of Design in New York City, he trained in Paris with the famous French portraitist Emile Auguste Carolus-Duran (1838 – 1917). His work was shown in the Exposition Universelle at Paris in 1889, and the Chicago World's Fair in 1893. Irwin had studios in San Francisco, New York, and Baltimore.
[edit] Personal Life
Benoni Burdeau Irwin was born in 1840 in Newmarket, Ontario, Canada to Jared Irwin (1803 – 1873) and Lydia Kennedy (1807 – 1871) and moved to upstate New York as a child. He was a pupil of the National Academy of Design in New York City from 1861 to 1863 and trained in Paris with the famous French portraitist Emile Auguste Carolus-Duran (1838 – 1917) from 1867 to 1869. He returned to the United States by 1870, where he spent time in Louisville, KY and San Francisco (where he resided for five years) throughout the 1870s and 1880s.
In 1873, while in California, Irwin married Adelaide (Adela) Vellejo Curtis (May 29, 1853 – 1932). She was the daughter of Lucian Curtis, a copper plate engraver and farmer, born in Coventry, CT and Celia Carlton Perkins, born in Philadelphia, PA. The Curtis family had come to San Francisco during the California Gold Rush in 1849 and, at one time, lived in the famous Rancho Petaluma Adobe owned by General Mariano Vallejo, a family friend.
Irwin and his wife, Adela, had two children, Edith C. (1874 – 1925) and Constance (b. 1885).
By the 1880s, Irwin and his wife and daughters were living in Yonkers, NY. They had a second home on the shore of Coventry Lake in Coventry, CT, which the family would visit during the summer. The Irwins were frequent guests of Adela's aunt, Charlotte Curtis Dean, a life long Coventry resident. It was here, in 1896, that Irwin, while taking photographs of the sunset from a round bottom boat, lost his balance and fell into the lake. Postmortem revealed that Irwin had drowned after being knocked unconscious by hitting his head on the edge of the boat as he fell.
Benoni Irwin is buried with his wife, Adela, and daughter, Edith, in Nathan Hale Cemetery, Coventry, CT.
[edit] Miscellaneous
- In 1870, while in Louisville, KY, Irwin lived with American artist Andrew Fisher Bunner (1841 – 1897), landscape and marine painter
- Irwin was the brother-in-law of American artist Mary Curtis Richardson (1848 – 1931), known as the Mary Cassatt of the west
- Irwin was a close friend of John Muir, who helped develop Yosemite as a national park.
[edit] Portraits
(partial list)
- John Henry Clifford (1809 – 1876), Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 1853-1854
- Joshua A. Norton, a.k.a. His Imperial Majesty Emperor Norton I, self-proclaimed "Emperor of the United States and Protector of Mexico"
- Edward C. Messer, head of the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, DC (Metropolitan Museum of Art collection)
- Charles H. Farnham, writer
- Judge David Curtis Sanford (d 1864), of New Milford, CT, member of Connecticut state senate, 1854; superior court judge in Connecticut, 1854-64
- Emily Bull Sanford, wife of Judge David Curtis Sanford
- William Diamon Black, New Milford, CT resident, son-in-law of Judge David Curtis Sanford
- Carolin Wilson Cooke, Kentucky resident
- Alice Lee Cooke, Kentucky resident
- Thomas Prather Jacob, son of prominant Louisville, KY businessman John Jeremiah Jacob and brother of Richard Taylor Jacob, Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky (1863-64)
- Thomas Newcomb (1843 – 1906), first president of the Bohemian Club, San Francisco; secretary to the Governor of New York
- Charles Warren Stoddard (1843 – 1909), American author
- Oliver Frazer (1808 – 1864), Kentucky portrait and miniature painter
- George T. Bromley, prominent San Francisco resident