Damon Family of Scituate, Mass., Genealogy, 2000

Damon Family of Scituate, Mass., Genealogy, 2000
Author: Richard A. Damon
Publisher:
Total Pages: 792
Release: 2002
Genre: Massachusetts
ISBN:

John Damon, son of John Damon and Miss Gilson, was born in Kent County, England 11 November 1621. He married Katherine Merritt, daughter of Henry Merritt and Deborah Buck, 16 June 1644 in Scituate, Massachusetts. They had thirteen children. John died in about 1676. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York., Illinois, Arkansas and California.

Slade - Babcock Genealogy

Slade - Babcock Genealogy
Author: Carl Boyer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 216
Release: 1970
Genre:
ISBN:

James Babcock was born in 1612 in England and married twice. He immigrated to Portsmouth, Rhode Island during or before 1642, and died in 1679 in Stonington, Connecticut.

A Leighton Genealogy

A Leighton Genealogy
Author:
Publisher: New England Historic Genealogical Society(NEHGS)
Total Pages: 616
Release: 1989
Genre: Reference
ISBN:

Thomas Leighton was born in England ca. 1604. He was probably among the planters who settled at Dover Point, New Hampshire, in 1633. He and his wife, Johanna, had four children, ca. 1642-1648, born at Dover. He died in 1672. Descendants lived in New Hampshire, Maine, Vermont, New York, Ohio, California, and elsewhere.

Frank Vining Smith

Frank Vining Smith
Author: James A. Craig
Publisher:
Total Pages: 180
Release: 2010
Genre: Antiques & Collectibles
ISBN:

For Frank Vining Smith (1879-1967), the nineteenth-century clipper ship, like the cathedral of the Middle Ages, was one of men's most glorious accomplishments. As Monet had done with the cathedral, Smith painted the ship, featuring it in different angles and at different times of the day. Having studied under the supervision of Frank W. Benson, and Edmund Tarbell at the Museum School in Boston, Smith brought a new approach to the conservative art of marine painting. When looking at a painting by Smith, one does not see the blueprint of detail that was common in ship painting at the turn of the century, instead one sees masses of shadows and the suggestion of details. Up close, it is difficult to see where one brush-stroke ends and another begins, but seen from a distance, his compositions work perfectly, and is what contributor Peter Williams calls "the alchemy of Smith's impressionism". AUTHOR: James A. Craig is a curator and lecturer specializing in nineteenth-century American marine art. SELLING POINTS: *Definitive exploration of the art and life of this prolific Massachusetts artist's 70 year career *Of interest to museums, universities, yacht clubs, yachting enthusiasts, and antique collectors *Vining Smith's work is in collections across the United States including in navy wardrooms, and he counted former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt as one of his loyal patrons ILLUSTRATIONS: 93 colour & 72 b/w