Object of the Day

Frank Blackwell Mayer's "The Continentals"

December 30

Frank Blackwell Mayer painted this scene of Continental soldiers on the centennial of the battle of Bunker Hill, the first great battle of the Revolutionary War. In 1876 he submitted it to the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition, an event that celebrated the founding of the nation. The painting was highly praised and became so popular that other artists copied it enthusiastically. The cheerful image of soldiers marching through the snow to the beat of a drum and the sound of a flute reinforced the glowing myth of the war, inspiring a renewed patriotism on the nation’s one hundredth birthday.

The Continentals

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Frank Blackwell Mayer painted this scene of Continental soldiers on the centennial of the battle of Bunker Hill, the first great battle of the Revolutionary War. In 1876 he submitted it to the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition, an event that celebrated the founding of the nation. The painting was highly praised and became so popular that other artists copied it enthusiastically. The cheerful image of soldiers marching through the snow to the beat of a drum and the sound of a flute reinforced the glowing myth of the war, inspiring a renewed patriotism on the nation’s one hundredth birthday. (Page, “Francis Blackwell Mayer,” The Magazine Antiques, February 1976)
Data Source
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Artist
Frank Blackwell Mayer, born Baltimore, MD 1827-died Annapolis, MD 1899
Date
1875
Credit Line
Smithsonian American Art Museum, George Buchanan Coale Collection
Medium
oil on canvas
Dimensions
22 1/2 x 18 3/8 in. (57.0 x 46.7 cm.)
Type
Painting