Sign of The Duke of Cumberland
Original OwnerOriginally owned by
Oliver Pomeroy
(American, 1729 - 1776)
Original OwnerOriginally owned by
Mary Lyman
(American, 1729 - 1776)
MakerMaker
Unknown
Date1753
MediumPaint on pine board, ash posts
DimensionsPrimary Dimensions (height x width including hardware): 42 1/4 x 21in. (107.3 x 53.3cm)
Other (height x width of sign only): 40 5/8 x 20 1/4in. (103.2 x 51.4cm)
Other (height x width of sign only): 40 5/8 x 20 1/4in. (103.2 x 51.4cm)
ClassificationsPainting
Credit LineCollection of Morgan B. Brainard. Gift of Mrs. Morgan B. Brainard
DescriptionImages: on both sides, three-quarter view of leaping black horse, with rider dressed as cavalier; image is centered against white ground; side 2 is overpainted, with grass added beneath horse's feet; no underlying images. Construction: Single board, with applied moldings; no structural frame. Board is oriented vertically and hand-sawn at top and bottom to create decorative pediment and skirt profiles. Double moldings make a rectangular frame for the central image. The ogee-profiled inner moldings are applied to both faces of the signboard and nailed with hand-wrought nails; corners are mitered. The outer moldings consist of thick boards with rounded ("bullnose") edge profiles, applied to the side edges and to the top and bottom faces of the signboard; at the corners, the outer horizontal moldings are contoured to fit around the shaped vertical moldings. Wood is Pinus strobus, Eastern white pine, identified by analysis (Hoadley, March 2000). Surface: Side 1 is severely weathered, although brushwork, following the contours of the horse, remains visible in the black paint; no other colors were found remaining in the image. Lettering was executed between scribed guidelines. Side 2 was overpainted by Louis James Donlon in 1914; the repainted image has a cartoon-like character, created by heavy black outlines (possibly oil paint) surrounding areas of vivid, rather flat colors. A patch of grass was added beneath the horse, although there is no evidence of such a background element on side 1.
Object number1961.63.43
NotesHistorical Note: Original locations. This sign hung at two separate structures within the Stepney Parish of Wethersfield, which was incorporated as Rocky Hill in 1843. The Pomeroy house, referred to by antiquarians as the "Long Tavern," was a frame structure, probably built in the 1750s, on the river landing in Rocky Hill, near Pomeroy's wharf. It is no longer extant. When Robbins became tavernkeeper, he evidently acquired the Pomeroy sign and moved it to his own house, located on the hill above the landing, along the main road from Middletown to Hartford. Robbins was among the wealthiest men in Connecticut, and his brick residence, built in 1767, was one of the most expensive houses built anywhere in the Connecticut River Valley prior to the Revolution. Both substantial and stylish, it introduced into the area such cosmopolitan Georgian features as a Palladian-style window and cornice with modillion blocks and flutings. That Robbins did not commission a new sign to hang in front of his handsome house suggests that the image on Pomeroy's old sign may have held a particular significance for him, as for his predecessor. Robbins's house remains standing on its original site, now fronting a side street parallel to Rt. 99 in Rocky Hill.On View
On viewCollections
Captain Aaron Bissell Sr.
1772-1786
before 1892