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Seward Portraits
Presented to Museum
The evening of
May 3, 2004 marked an exciting event for the Monroe County Historical
Society and for the citizens of Monroe Co. as the descendants of
Marilyn Seward Warden and her sister, Nancy Seward Kochery/Taylor,
officially presented portraits of Austin Seward and his wife Jennett
Seward to our county museum. Austin Seward is the blacksmith who is
credited with producing the original fish weather vane for the 1826
courthouse. The portraits were painted in the early 1860s by a
Bloomington portrait painter, Marion Blair. These portraits last
hung in the home of Marilyn Warden who passed away in Feb. of this
year. Marilyn was a long-time faithful volunteer at our museum and
was especially proud to be a part of this nearly legendary founding
family. May 3rd would have marked her 81st birthday, which
is why her daughter Nancy Wrobleski chose that date to officially
present these wonderful portraits.
Please visit the
museum soon to see these outstanding paintings and the expanded Seward
exhibit. We celebrate this significant addition to the museum’s
collection of Monroe County artifacts.
A Brief History of
Austin Seward
Read at the portrait presentation
ceremony on May 3, 2004
(Researched and read by Allison
Lendman)
Austin Seward
was born in VA in ca 1797, grew up in Richmond, KY where he married
Jennett “Jane” Irvin in 1817; and, in 1821, the small family followed
relatives who had earlier moved to Monroe Co. Jane was from a
prosperous family. She was well educated and moved in the best
society in Richmond. Austin’s early education was limited, but by
extensive reading and close observation he became a man of great and
varied information. He had been apprenticed at age 12 to learn
blacksmithing and was permanently lamed while shoeing a vicious horse
as a youth, but this did not injure his spirit. He soon was also
apprenticed as an edge-tool maker.
Upon arriving in
Monroe County in 1821, just 3 years after the founding of Monroe Co.
and Bloomington, the family built a log home and blacksmith shop on
the SW corner of 7th and Walnut. Austin immediately began
to produce items that the young community’s settlers desperately
needed. Axes, adzes, scythes, knives and other articles were shaped
on his anvil. Necessity led him to attempt things out of his line to
accommodate neighbors. A list of things he could make eventually
included nearly everything used in Indiana in which iron or steel was
involved - bits, plows, wagon wheels, chains, bullet molds, bear and
wolf traps, the metal parts of looms, spinning wheels, stoves, and
skillets to name just a few. He was also a master gunsmith and
produced rifles that were in great demand for their workmanship and
accuracy. He made them absolutely from scratch – lock, stock, and
barrel. It is said that he could temper steel as well as the workmen
from Birmingham and Sheffield, England. He trained numerous
apprentices who were welcomed into his home and were cared for by Jane
just as she cared for her growing family. Eventually there were 9
sons (2 of whom died in infancy) and two daughters. By 1828 a larger
shop had been built across the street to the east, and the family had
built a brick house in place of the cabin on the original lot. This
house was said to have been the most consequential house in the small
settlement at that time.
Austin was also
active in the community immediately. He taught Sunday school for the
Presbyterian church in 1821 in his own cabin. He was hired to paint
the under-construction 1826 brick courthouse and to provide numerous
other services to the county – locks for the jail, handcuffs, and a
stamp for the official weights and measures were just some of the
items he provided. He is credited with producing the famous fish
weather vane which originally adorned Monroe County’s 1826
courthouse. In 1833 he was one of the incorporators of the Monroe
County Female Seminary. He organized and led the 1st band
ever active in Bloomington. All of his sons also participated in the
band from time to time.
During the
Civil War, Seward made a bronze cannon for the Union Army. It was
made from metal items donated by the citizens of Monroe Co. and melted
down and forged by Seward free of charge. It was pulled to Indy by a
team of six horses. He also provided large quantities of solid shot
and bombshells for the Union effort.
During his life
Austin counted as his intimate friends some of Bloomington’s most
influential citizens including Dr. David Maxwell, Baynard R. Hall, Dr.
Andrew Wylie and Governors Whitcomb and Wright. He was also respected
and loved by the common citizens of the area. He was never known to
have turned away a person in need of his products – even if they could
not pay. It is said that if two men came to him to buy a plow – one
with money and one without – the latter man would get it. He reasoned
that the man with the money would be able to get a plow somewhere
else, while the poor man could not.
Baynard Hall,
the first professor at the institution which was to become Indiana
University, wrote of his friend Austin Seward in his allegorical tales
in his book The New Purchase. In the book, Seward is
named Vulcanus Allheart – Vulcanus after the Roman god of fire
and metalworking, and Allheart because he was just that, all
heart. Hall wrote: “Never have I so esteemed, ay, so loved anyone as
Vulcanus Allheart. And who or what was he? He was by birth a
Virginian, by trade a blacksmith, by nature a gentleman and by grace a
Christian. If more be said, he was a genius.”
Dr. Andrew
Wylie, first president of the same institution, when he learned that
Seward was dying, cried: “This community can better spare any man in
it, or the college every professor than it can spare Mr. Seward. We
can get other citizens and college professors to take their places
without any trouble, but no man can take his place!”
Austin Seward
died in 1872 and was buried in the Dunn Cemetery beside his wife Jane
who had died in 1865.
As the years
went by, six generations of this founding family of Bloomington, grew
and adapted the business to suit the community’s changing needs – from
blacksmith shop, to foundry, to machine shop, to industrial and
plumbing suppliers. In 1967, Seward and Co. had the proud distinction
of being the oldest business in Indiana run by the same family in the
same name. The doors of the business finally closed in 1983 after 162
years of existence.
Marion Blair, Painter of the Seward
Portraits
Taken from: Pioneer Painters of
Indiana
by Wilbur D. Peat
Published in 1954
The man who made
the strongest mark as a portrait painter in the village of Bloomington
during the Civil War period was Marion Blair. A native of the town,
he attended the university, married a local girl, and gradually came
to be recognized as the community’s resident painter. It appears that
he was unschooled in the finer points of painting; if he received any
instruction it was probably from itinerants passing through
Bloomington or in the studio of one of the artists established in
Indianapolis.
Blair was born
in 1824, the son of Enos and Rachel Blair. When a young man he moved
a few miles south of town to a spot called Blair Hollow. His strong
inclination toward art, literature, and natural history, coupled with
his antipathy for farming or manual labor of any kind, did not make
him a good provider for his growing family. His wife, unable to cope
with his habits, finally left him and moved to Kansas, taking their
children with her.
Blair had a
number of portrait commissions in Bloomington and apparently in
Indianapolis also. Most of his paintings seem to have been made in
the 50s and early 60s. During this period he did the portraits of
Austin Seward and his wife. His last portrait is said to be of
Abraham Lincoln painted after he viewed his body lying in state in the
capitol building in Indianapolis. He died in 1901. |