Karl Gerhardt

Karl Gerhardt
Karl Gerhardt around 1879

Karl Gerhardt (born Boston, Massachusetts, 7 January 1853; died Shreveport, Louisiana, 7 May 1940) was a United States sculptor.

Biography

He attended Phillips School in Boston. By 1870 he was apprenticed to a house painter in Chicopee, Massachusetts, where he later became a machinist at Ames Foundry. He showed considerable talent in mechanics, and later became a designer of machinery at Hartford, Connecticut.

In 1874, he went to California. By 1880, he had returned east to Hartford, and was married to Harriet Josephine Gerhardt, who came from Dalton, Massachusetts. He worked for a spell as chief machinist at the Pratt and Whitney Machine Tool Company in Hartford and pursued sculpting in his leisure hours.

His first works were a bust of his wife and "A Startled Bather." He was so successful at sculpting, that in 1881 Mark Twain financed a trip to study in Paris at the École des Beaux-Arts. In Paris his work was exhibited in the salon and won prizes. In 1884 he exhibited at the salon "Echo," a statuette, and "Eve's Lullaby," a life-size group.

Gerhardt's wife died in 1897. They had two children. In 1908, he was living in New Orleans, and by 1920 he had moved to Shreveport, Louisiana.

Selected works

General G.K. Warren (1888), Little Round Top, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
Carrie Welton Fountain (1888), Waterbury, Connecticut.

Civil War memorials

  • Soldiers' Monument, 2nd & Monument Streets, Deposit, New York, 1887–88.
  • Soldiers' Monument, Stevens Park, Hoboken, New Jersey, 1887–88.
  • Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument, Oneida Square, Utica, New York, 1887–91, George Keller, architect.
  • Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument, Brooklyn Post Office, Brooklyn, Connecticut, 1888.
  • Statue of Major General Gouverneur K. Warren, Little Round Top, Gettysburg Battlefield, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, 1888.
  • Stannard's Vermont Brigade Monument, Gettysburg Battlefield, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, 1889.
  • 2nd New York Cavalry Monument, Gettysburg Battlefield, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, 1892.

Notes

    References

    • Schmidt, Barbara. "Mark Twain and Karl Gerhardt". twainquotes.com. Retrieved 7 July 2011.

    Attribution

    •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Gerhardt, Karl". Encyclopedia Americana.
    •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John, eds. (1900). "Gerhardt, Karl". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
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