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  • The Marsh Collection
  • About George Perkins Marsh
  • About the Collection
  • Resources

Marsh Collection

About George Perkins Marsh

American History Museum

George Perkins Marsh was born in Woodstock, Vermont, in 1801. He served as a Whig representative in Congress from 1843 to 1849. As a congressman he actively participated in the debates and discussions that formed the Smithsonian, and he was a member of the Smithsonian Board of Regents from 1847 to 1849. He received a diplomatic appointment from President Zachary Taylor as U.S. minister to Turkey in 1849, where he remained through 1854. He then returned to Vermont for a few years, and in 1861 President Abraham Lincoln appointed him U.S. minister to Italy, where he served until his death in 1882. During his lifetime he was renowned as a lawyer and linguist, but today he is best known as the guiding spirit of the American environmental movement due to his influential book, Man and Nature; or, Physical Geography as modified by human action, first published in 1864.

Marsh was an avid reader from boyhood. He began buying books while a student at Dartmouth College, from which he graduated in 1820. By the late 1830s, when he was practicing law in Burlington, Vermont, he had begun to form a print collection to illustrate the progressive stages in the history of engraving. Although the cultural values that prints represented were acknowledged and shared by many members of antebellum society, Marsh collected prints somewhat earlier—and much more avidly—than most Americans. His natural inclination for study, analysis, and the comparison of proofs, together with his acquisition of European Old Master prints, distinguished him from most American art lovers. Even without many opportunities to see other collections, he managed through his voracious reading to acquire specialist knowledge and to develop strict criteria for judging the quality of impressions.

Most of Marsh’s contemporaries who collected prints did so as a result of foreign travel, but Marsh did not acquire his prints—or even his taste for them—while on the Grand Tour. He did not visit Europe until after he sold the collection to the Smithsonian. His strong scholarly interests in art, languages, and medieval literature led him to patronize East Coast book dealers who specialized in foreign-language titles. Some of these firms imported art books that developed his interest in prints. They supplied Marsh with European catalogs and collectors’ manuals that advised him on which prints to acquire and informed his growing connoisseurship.

Daguerreotype of Marsh family, around 1849. Library of Congress DAG no. 231.



Portrait of Abraham van der Doort

Portrait of Anne Lee, Marchioness of Wharton

Portrait of an Old Woman

Seashore with figures

Dogs and Still Life

Portrait of a young man

Portrait of a man

Rearing Horse

A Greyhound's Head

The Holy Family with John the Baptist

Virgin and Infant Jesus Asleep

King Charles the First

Woman in an Armchair

A Small Town in Latium

Landscape near Rome

Peasants Drinking

Democritus and Protagoras

Mary Magdalene washing Christ's feet

A Boy with his Nurse

A Concert of Birds

The Exposition of Moses

The Death of Joseph

Adoration of the Shepherds

Portraits of Hounds

Pope Clement IX

Virgin & Infant Jesus Asleep

The Prodigal Son

Virgin and Child

Helena Fourment

The Stoning of St. Stephen

Untitled landscape with bridge

Jacob Burying Laban's Images

The Assumption of the Virgin

The Shepherd's Offering

A Fish Market


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