Lincoln from Life

by Kristine Schmucker, HCHM Curator

In addition to the Murphy portrait, one other object remains as part of the museum from when the building served as the Newton Free Library. A sculpture, entitled “Lincoln from Life” by Volk is a fixture in the in the Archives.  The sculpture, at one time, was displayed  in the southwest corner of the main floor reading room (see photo below).

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The Lincoln bust was a gift from W.I. Plumb.  Born in Ohio in 1848, Plumb engaged in business pursuits in several states.  He came to Newton, Ks, in 1887 and established the China Emporium at 504 Main. The business was noted as “the only store of its kind in Newton and had long been a landmark in the business district and is a very prosperous enterprise.”  He served for a number of years on the Newton School Board and was a deacon in the Congregational Church. He was married to Euphemia Carr in 1871 and the couple had 10 children with 5 living to adulthood.

Shortly after the Newton Free Library opened, Plumb donated the sculpture.

“On motion the Library Board accepted the fine bust of Lincoln given by Mr. W.I. Plumb, and directed that a vote of thanks be extended to him.”

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Lincoln from Life by L.W. Volk.

The plaster bust of Lincoln is known as the “draped” or “Romanesque” rendering.

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Leonard Volk, artist

Leonard Wells Volk was a sculpture born in New York state in 1828. From 1855 to 1857, he studied his craft abroad.  He settled in Chicago when he returned.  Among his work are a life-sized statue of Stephen Douglass in marble.  He also executed several busts and statues of prominent men.

Creating the mask

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Left: Volk Mask & Hands, 1860; Right Mills Mask, 1865. Photo courtesy Abraham Lincoln Online.

Volk made the first life mask of Lincoln in 1860, several months before Lincoln won the presidential election.   Making the plaster cast was “anything by agreeable” according to Lincoln.

Volk described creating the mask at his studio in the Portland Block in Chicago.

“My studio was in the fifth story, and there were no elevators in those days, and I soon learned to distinguish Lincoln’s  steps on the stairs, and am sure he frequently came up two, if not three steps at a stride.”

Lincoln was there promptly each morning and never failed to be on time. On one occasion Lincoln observed:

“I have never sat before to sculpture or painter — only for daguerreotypes and photographs.  What shall I do?”

Volk first took measurements of Lincoln’s head and shoulders and made a plaster cast of the face.

“It was about an hour before the mold was ready to be removed, and being all in one piece, with both ears perfectly taken, it clung pretty hard, and the cheek-bones were higher than the jaws at the lobe of the ear.  He bent his head low and took hold of the mold, and gradually worked it off without breaking or injury; it hurt a little as a few hairs of the tender temples pulled out with the plaster and made his eyes water.”

Shortly after Lincoln received the nomination for president, Volk made a cast of Lincoln’s hands (see above photo).  The cast of Lincoln’t right hand appears noticeably larger than the left.  Volk recalled that this was “on account of excessive hand-shaking the evening before.”

The second mask in the photo is of the Clark Mill life mask made in February 1865.  A comparison reveals a much older looking Lincoln in addition to the beard.

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The various busts and statues Volk produced, including HCHM’s,  were based on the life mask made in his studio in 1860. Later artists also relied on the mask by Volk as a “most reliable document of the Lincoln face  . . . it is the actual form.

Sources:

  • A Standard History of Kansas and Kansans: William I. Plumb, 1918.
  • Fielding, Mantele.  Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors and Engravers, 1926.
  • www.abrahamlincolnonline.org/lincoln/resource/masks.htm
  • Lincoln Life Masks at the National Portrait Gallery

Museum Mystery Man: the Murphy Portrait

by Kristine Schmucker, HCHM Curator

When the Newton Free Library opened in it’s new building in March 1904 at the corner of 2nd and Main, the front two rooms were furnished as reading rooms.  Patrons would request the book they wanted and the Librarian would go to the stacks in the room behind the desk and retrieve the requested item.

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From that time, only two objects remain at the Harvey County Historical Museum & Archives. The below picture hung behind the Librarians desk on the south side.

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Pen & ink on canvas by Will R. Murphy, 1898.

This pen and ink drawing was created in 1898 by Will R. Murphy, a prolific Harvey County photographer at the turn of the century.

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Signature “Will R. Murphy ’98”

There is no indication on the piece of the identity of the man who is the subject.

Could it be a self portrait?

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Will R. Murphy, 50th Anniversary Ed. Kansan, August 1922.

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Detail of portrait

Around the same time, Murphy drew Newton’s Main Street, 1871, based off of a photograph attributed to F. D. Tripp.***Note: 04/2020 further research revealed that it is unlikely that the photo was taken by Tripp.

Who do you think the mystery man might be? Why was it given to the library?

At this point we do not have answers, but the drawing continues to be an intriguing part of the the building’s history.

There is one other object that was part of the original furnishings of the Carnegie Library Building and remains in the Museum’s collection.  Any guesses?

Answer next week.

For more on Early Harvey County Photographers.

 

“Newton’s Orator On To Washington:” Robert G. Rayburn

by Kristine Schmucker, HCHM Curator

All of Newton celebrated when the 1931 debate team won the State Championship title,  but that was not the end  for one member of the successful team. Newton High Senior and Orator, Robert G. Rayburn, was able to keep competing, representing Newton, Kansas and the United States along the way.

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Robert G. Rayburn was born January 14, 1915 in Newton, Ks. He was the third son of four in the family of Presbyterian minister and evangelist, James C. Rayburn and Elna Beck Rayburn. A talented pianist, Robert participated in many activities at Newton High. He also joined his father in several evangelistic campaigns.

In 1931, Rayburn was a member of the state debate team and he competed as an orator at the national and international level.  Early in May 1931, he competed against five other students in the Mid-western Zone finals held in Kansas City.

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Following his “decisive victory,” he with Mrs. Moore traveled to Washington D.C. to compete at the national level.

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To prepare for the national contest, Rayburn developed and learned thirty extemporaneous speeches in the week before the contest.  Three ballots were required to win from the contest judges.

“Robert’s oration was titled, ‘The Tests of the Constitution’ . . . he won particular applause with his extemporaneous speaking with followed his prepared oration.”

The news of his victory was welcomed in his home community.

“All of Kansas and particularly Newton rejoiced Sunday morning over the success of Robert Rayburn in winning first place in the National oratorical contest at Washington D.C. on Saturday night.”

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In October 1931, Rayburn competed as the American representative in the international contest in Washington D.C. There were seven contestants. Although he gave a strong effort, Rayburn did not place in the top three at the contest.

“Reports indicate that Robert’s prepared oration was exceptionally well received, but he was handicapped in his extemporaneous speech by the somewhat unusual and intricate subject of the “Relation of the Constitution to the Philippines.”

Rayburn studied music at Bethel College North Newton, and graduated from Wheaton College in 1939 and Omaha Presbyterian Theological Seminary in 1941. He received his doctorate degree from the Dallas Theological Seminary in 1944.  He served as an army chaplain in Europe from 1944-46 and again during the Korean War with the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team.  He wrote about his wartime experiences in his book, Fight the Good Fight. 

In 1944, he married LaVerne Swanson Rayburn.  They had four children, Linnea, Bronwyn, Bentley, and Robert S.

Following his retirement from the military chaplaincy, he served as a leader in the Reformed Presbyterian Church.  Rayburn was the founding president of Covenant College. In 1980, he published O Come Let Us Worship: Corporate Worship in the Evangelical Church.  Throughout his later years,  Dr. Rayburn spent time teaching Seminary students, writing and speaking.  He was able to be active up until his death from cancer January 5, 1990 at the age of 74,

Sources:

  • Evening Kansan Republican, 16 May 1931, 18 May 1931, 23 May 1931, 24 May 1931, 24 October 1931, 26 October 1931.
  • Evening Kansan Republican, 1 November 1952; 20 October 1954.
  • “This Day in Presbyterian History – January 5: Dr. Robert G. Rayburn (1915-1990).”  at www.thisday.pcahistory.org/2016/01/January-5-4.
  • “Robert Gibson Rayburn Papers.” Finding Aid at www.pcahistory.org/findingaids/rayburn/.