Thomas Scott Williams, II by George Hewitt Cushman,
signed, circa 1842.
Thomas Scott Williams, II (1818-1842) of Weatherfield,
Connecticut was the son of John Williams and Mry Dyer. He was named
after his eminent uncle, Congressman from Connecticut, Thomas Scott
Williams. One of Cushman's earliest works, taken at a time when the
artist was painting only family, it is
likely that Cushman, also
an eastern Connecticut native, and Williams were acquainted.
Set
in the original gold locket frame with cast foliate border on the
front, engine-turned reverse, hinged at the top. The miniature is
signed on the backing paper Cushman/
Painter. The other side of
the backing paper, written by the artist is
T. S. Williams/ 2nd/
Drowned/ Sept/ 1842.
1 inch high.
George Hewitt Cushman (1814-1876) studied with Washington Alston
before turning to engraving, first in Hartford, then in Boston. In
1842, Cushman moved to Philadelphia where he was a bank note and
book engraver, all the while painting portraits of friends and family
and exhibiting at the Artists' Fund Society. In 1862, Cushman decided
to devote himself to portraiture, moving to New York. Cushman's rare
works are in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and
the Philadelphia Museum of Art. His portrait of Susan Wetherill,
who would later become his wife, is in the Yale University Art Gallery.

