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This Day in Boston History
March 1st, 1848
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
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On this day, Augustus
Saint-Gaudens was born in Dublin, Ireland. His family moved to New York
City, where he he was apprenticed to a cameo cutter. At nineteen he
traveled to Paris and Rome, studying classical art and architecture,
and soon began to work as a sculptor.
Over his career, he produced over 200 works in marble and bronze, became
internationally known for his art, instruction and advocacy. At various
times he maintained studios in New York, Paris, and at his country retreat,
Aspet, in New Hampshire.
Among his best-known pieces are six Civil War monuments, including the
Shaw Memorial.
It tells the story of the Massachusetts Fifty-fourth Regiment and depicts
a procession of black soldiers and their white leader moving together
toward the goal of emancipation. The bronze now stands on the Boston
Common across from the State House.
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From the writers of iBoston.org |
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