THE FIVE MEDALS OF LUCIUS FAIRCHILD Public Deposited

Article content
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 53, December 18, 2005, Article 19

    THE FIVE MEDALS OF LUCIUS FAIRCHILD

    Katie Jaeger writes: "A few weeks ago in The E-Sylum,
    Dick Johnson mentioned our joint research trip to the
    Tiffany & Co. archives in Parsippany, NJ. Aside from being
    a day spent in exceptional good company, for me it was a
    day of piqued interest, not just in my own research and
    Dick's, but in a query the archivist posed to us at the
    end of the day. Having spent all afternoon overhearing
    our comments as we worked, the archivist (Louisa Bann)
    began to realize how much Dick knew about American medals
    and brought over some queries she had been receiving, that
    had stumped her. He answered some immediately, so she
    brought more. One was an email from a man researching a
    John Singer Sargent portrait of Civil War general Lucius
    Fairchild. In the painting, Fairchild is wearing 5 medals.
    Sargent was an impressionist, so there is no detail but
    the shape, ribbon color, and general attributes of the
    bars, eagles, etc., on the medals, but these are all
    accurate. The emailer had identified three of the medals,
    and sought help with Tiffany's for the other two. Both
    were unfamiliar to Dick and me, but the emailer's quest
    to establish biographical detail (on Fairchild) through
    material culture (a painting AND medals), had me salivating.
    I wanted the details. So I emailed Louisa Bann and begged
    her to give me the guy's address.

    His name is Barry Bauman, of River Forest, IL and he is
    a painting conservator. He told me that he has done so
    well in that business, that he has been able to quit
    charging for his work, but he will only accept jobs from
    cash-strapped museums and historical societies who need
    his services to preserve really important works. Imagine
    his delight when the Wisconsin Historical Society sent
    him a $4 million Sargent to conserve! Working on the
    painting prompted him to want to get to know its subject,
    General Lucius Fairchild, and tell his story. He spent
    months on the quest, and the attached link, recently made
    public by Bauman, spells it out. It is a magnificent story
    with many levels of interest: historical, artistic, and
    numismatic. And in my opinion, Sargent was one of our top
    portraitists and this website is a feast for the eyes.
    I'm sure E-Sylum readers will be interested to learn how
    Bauman tracked down the five medals. The link is below:
    Full Story "

    [From Fairchild's diary: "December 9, 1887--"The portrait
    is going on--probably three more sittings will finish it
    --The badges are all on the manly breast."

    Here's a quick link to the medal section: Full Story

    Medal #1: The Grand Army of the Republic
    Medal #2: The Unknown Medal
    Medal #3: The Grand Army of the Republic
    Presentation Medal
    Medal #4: The Military Order of the Loyal Legion
    of the United States
    Medal #5: The Society of the Army of the Potomac

    "As stated earlier, the search for the medals took
    numerous paths. Contacts were made with historians,
    medal experts, museum curators, descendants and Internet
    forums. Four of the medals are now known. Medal #2 remains
    unknown but there are inherent clues, based on Fairchild's
    career, as to its possible origins. Gleaned information
    from Sargent's artistic reinterpretation of the previous
    medals lends benefits and difficulties."
    Full Story

    Can any of our readers help identify Medal #2? -Editor]

Source URL Date published
  • 2005-12-18
Volume
  • 8

Relationships

NNP Author