1805
Hannah Moore Peale (1755 - 1821)
Moses WilliamsAmerican, 1776 - 1830
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This cut-paper profile by Moses Williams represents Hannah Moore Peale, the third wife of Charles Willson Peale (1741–1827), the Philadelphia artist, inventor, and creator of the Peale Museum, the nation’s first successful museum dedicated to educating and entertaining the public. In 1802 the museum introduced the physiognotrace, a machine that traced a sitter’s profile to create a small souvenir portrait. Inexpensive, accurate, and quickly produced and reproduced, these popular pictures were exchanged by friends and family as keepsakes and indicators of one’s character. It was on a visit to the museum to have her profile cut that Hannah Moore first met Charles, and she married him shortly thereafter.
Scholars believe that in 1776, Charles accepted Lucy and Scarborough Williams, a mixed-race couple, as payment for commissioned portraits. Their son, Moses, born in 1775, also became Peale’s property by law. Despite his participation in slavery, Charles lobbied for Pennsylvania’s 1780 Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery. Six years after its passage, he freed Lucy and Scarborough. But he did not liberate their son for another sixteen years. Moses became skilled in the work required to maintain the Peale Museum and create its displays. On his emancipation, Moses was employed by the museum, and he was distinguished by his ability to cut fine profile portraits on its physiognotrace.
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