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Painting created by Martha Benevelli as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020.

2020

I made an on-line contribution to the COVID collection (a photograph of a painting I created), but I didn’t find a place to add a description. I think it speaks for itself (or, rather, the children’s sidewalk writings speak for themselves), but for the sake of thoroughness, the picture is called ‘Sidewalk writings by children in the Millwood neighborhood of Austin, TX during the pandemic.’

2020

Angels with Mercy original oil painting created by Beverly Kemp as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic

2020

Blue Light Special original oil painting created by Beverly Kemp as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic

2020

Pandemic Panic original oil painting created by Beverly Kemp as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic

2020

Toilet Paper Poker original oil painting created by Beverly Kemp as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic

2020

"Acrylic painting. 'Stay-At-Home' procedures force kids to grow up faster than imagined with newfound responsibilities."

2020

IIllustration of Austin about 1839 or 1841. Copied from print in book "Austin Yesterday and Today". Call number: A 976.411 AU76J. Back of title page. Daughters of the Republic of Texas owns the original artwork.

circa 1840

A copy print of Governor James Hogg's official gubernatorial portrait, the original of which hangs in the Texas State Capitol. The original painting was by Robert Joy in 1951.

undated

Copy Print of a painting of Lamar

undated

Black and while photographic copy of a color painting of Elisha Marshall Pease. Elisha Marshall Pease (1812-1883) was born in Enfield, Hartford County, Connecticut, to Lorrain T. Pease and Sarah (Marshall) Pease. He was called "Marshall" by his family and is not known to have signed himself as anything but "E. M. Pease" and "Marshall"--never "Elisha." He studied at Westfield Academy (Mass.) until age fourteen or fifteen, after which he worked as a store clerk and then for the Hartford Post Office. He left Connecticut in 1834 and, after exploring the Midwest and making a trip to New Orleans, came to Texas in 1835. There he came to acquire financial security that he could not gain in New England. Pease settled in the Municipality of Mina (later renamed Bastrop) where he became involved in the early stages of the Texas Revolution. He fought in the first battle at Gonzales, and then he began service to the interim government and, later, that of the Republic of Texas. He wrote part of the Constitution of the Republic of Texas and served in several positions in the interim government. He settled in Brazoria at the invitation of John Austin Wharton, where he joined Wharton's law firm, and he was admitted to the Texas bar in 1837. He served in the first three terms of the Texas legislature after annexation. Pease ran unsuccessfully for governor in 1851, but he won two years later, and he and his family moved to Austin. He was governor for two terms (1853-1857), during which time his administration settled the debt remaining from the Texas Revolution, putting the state on a sound financial foundation for the first time. He persuaded the Legislature to establish a Permanent School Fund of two million dollars, but as much as he wanted public schools, they were not generally operational until after the Civil War. He encouraged railroad construction in the state and led the building campaign that resulted in construction of the Governor's Mansion, the General Land Office, and a new Capitol. He also led the establishment of state schools for the deaf and the blind, as well as the state "lunatic asylum." In 1859, Pease bought the home that James B. Shaw had built west of the City of Austin in 1854. With its surrounding farm and untouched acres, it became known as Woodlawn. The house was the prototype of the Governor's Mansion--both were built by Austin's "master builder," Abner H. Cook. Four generations of the Pease family lived there. Before, during, and after the Civil War, Pease was loyal to the Union, although he was an enslaver. He and his family remained in Austin during the War, lest they lose all their property, and he farmed with enslaved people at Woodlawn. Because he refused to swear loyalty to the Confederacy, he could not practice law during the War. During Reconstruction, he unsuccessfully ran for governor in 1866. The following year, he was appointed provisional governor by the U. S. Army command in charge of Texas. In 1869, he resigned over political differences. He continued to be involved in Texas politics and, in 1879, he was appointed United States Customs Collector, where he served two years. He co-founded a bank in Austin and was involved in civic improvements. Pease died suddenly in Lampasas and was buried in the family plot of the Austin City Cemetery, now Oakwood Cemetery.

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Photographic reproduction of a painted portrait of Lucadia Pease, holding book in lap. Lucadia Christiana (Niles) Pease (1813-1905) was born in Poquonock, Hartford County, Connecticut, to Richard Niles and Christiana (Griswold) Niles. Her education was equivalent to a level of high school today. At age twenty-five, she went to stay with a family in Virginia and saw Southern plantation life, including slavery, for the first time. She later visited her uncle, U. S. Senator John Milton Niles, in Washington City at the time that Texas was annexed to the Union. In 1848, Marshall Pease (a distant cousin) proposed to Lucadia, and they were married two years later. Throughout her life in Texas, Lucadia maintained her relationship with her family in Connecticut and with her husband while he was away through extensive correspondence. She was also in the north for months at a time--hence much more correspondence was written during those periods. Lucadia and Marshall's letters are full of their love for one another and for their three daughters, Carrie Margaret, Julia Maria (Julie), and Anne Marshall. During the Civil War, Anne died of typhoid fever at the age of seven. The couple brought up the children with as much education as they could provide in Austin, which had no public schools at the time, and in Connecticut. In the 1850s, Lucadia declared her belief in women's rights, and her husband supported her. She owned property in her own name and was executrix of his extensive will. As the governor's wife and thereafter, she was responsible for extensive hospitality, which was known to be gracious. She passed away at the age of ninety-one.

undated

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