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DR. ISAIAH F. EVERHART
ENGROSSING – 1908 – by P.W. COSTELLO
Isaiah F. Everhart (1840-1911) was a medical doctor, Civil War surgeon
and naturalist who founded the Everhart Museum of Natural History,
Science & Art, located in Nay Aug Park in Scranton.
P.W. Costello’s engrossing includes two separate resolutions. The first
commemorates Everhart’s donation of the newly constructed museum to the
City of Scranton in May 1908, at a cost of $100,000. The second
highlights the donation of another $100,000 to build and maintain two
wings to the left and right of the original building. Everhart also
gifted his “rare and magnificent” collection of animals, birds, fish
and minerals, all native to PA.
This is a prime example of Mr. Costello’s skillful use of acanthus leaf
designs and multi-layered, cloud-like watercolor washes to accent
titles and borders. The entire piece is done in varying shades of
Payne’s Gray watercolor, a favorite pigment of Mr. Costello’s. He would
lighten it with Chinese white or darken it with lampblack, depending on
the desired effect. Note the lion’s head positioned to the left of the
capital “R” in “Resolved” at bottom left.
He used block lettering for the large titles, and alternated Old
English and Engrosser’s Text throughout the rest of the document, much
of it drop-shaded to give each letter a raised look.
The portrait of Isaiah Everhart is superbly executed. It was modeled
after an oil painting done by L. R. Evans in 1906 that hangs above the
museum’s main stairway, a gift of Joseph J. Jermyn, a railroad
executive and Scranton mayor.
The image is used courtesy of the Everhart Museum, Scranton. |
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Engrossed resolution
honoring ISAIAH F. EVERHART, MD, Dated:
June 22, 1908
From the collection of the Lackawanna Historical Society in Scranton
The engrossing was commissioned by the Scranton Board of Trade in
appreciation for Dr. Everhart’s benevolence in giving the Everhart
Museum of Natural History and Science to the people of the City of
Scranton.
“A mere monument to the memory of man is vain, futile and without
significance. It crumbles! but the love of humanity which finds
expression in the education and uplifting of mankind lives on.”
The document is signed by a committee that included H. C. Reynolds,
Ezra H. Ripple, Civil War hero and former Scranton mayor, and Thomas H.
Dale.
The large heading at top, and the center panel with Everhart’s name,
are beautifully lettered in Old English in black ink, drop-shaded in
gray and surrounded by a multi-layered watercolor wash.
Mr. Costello used Engrosser’s Text throughout the rest of the document.
The larger lettering in Everhart Museum of Natural History and Science,
Resolved and Committee are drop-shaded in gray and flourished with
delicately drawn filigree. Curved details added to the serif
of certain letters, both above and below the baseline (t, f, b, p, y
and g, are examples), give the text an informal, more personalized,
“gothic” look.
The engrossing is simple and elegant in its design and execution. |
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JOHN VON BERGEN, SR.
ENGROSSING – 1910
John Von Bergen, Sr.
(1845-1910), former miner and highly-respected Superintendent of the
Scranton Coal Company, was also the father of Scranton’s fourteenth
mayor, of the same name.
Following Von Bergen’s death on April
15, 1910, employees of the Scranton Coal Company adopted memorial
resolutions praising a man of “splendid character” whose “official
career was marked by wisdom and merited honor.”
P. W. Costello’s
colorful document includes a watercolor portrait of Von Bergen
surrounded by a spray of bright blue delphiniums and white lilies,
traditional symbols of mourning and rebirth. Block-lettered titles and
text are accented by scrolls, acanthus leaf borders and a layered wash.
The entire piece is sepia-toned, giving it a classical look.
Image used courtesy of the Everhart Museum, Scranton, PA. |
 | Left: When
David Lloyd George, British Prime Minister, of
Welsh descent, came to
Scranton in August 1922 it was a huge event for the Welsh Community.
The newspapers gave it multiple pages of photos and stories. He came
again in 1924, after he had left office. Both times, P.W. was
commissioned to do engrossings commemorating the visits.
Right: Liverymen
and
Undertaker Beneficial Association: 1915 death Brother G. A.
Miller.
Committee: Oscar Strauch; George E. Atherton; George Fenne.
Image courtesy of Bob & Valerie Miller, Miller Bean Funeral
Home, Scranton.
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