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1 Indian Makock of Sugar

Object Status:

Unlocated

Accession Date:

December 24, 1822

Primary Source Reference:

Peale Museum Accessions Book, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, p. 123

Additional Source Text:

From near Fort Smith, Arkansas

Notes:

A macock is "a box made from ther inner bark of the elm or birch, in which the Indians pack maple-sugar for transportation." Transactions of the Moravian Historical Society, 1 (1876): 279

James Reid Lambdin (1807-1889) was an American artist, famous for many of his portraits of U.S. Presidents. Shortly after making this donation he was studying art in Philadelphia and exhibited a portrait at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1824. In 1827 Lambdin established and ran a Museum of Natural History and Gallery of Painting in Pittsburgh, which included both artistic and scientific displays and was clearly inspired by the Peale Museum in Philadelphia. Lambdin settled permanently in Philadelphia in 1837 and from 1861 to 1866 was Professor of Fine Arts at the University of Pennsylvania / https://www.nga.gov/collection/artist-info.1452.html