Joe Esposito submitted this illustrated article about other numismatic exhibits at the National Museum of American History. Thanks!
-Editor
In recent months The E-Sylum has presented information on the new National Numismatic Collection at the Smithsonian Institution.
This magnificent collection, housed at the National Museum of American History, is the most extensive numismatic exhibition in Washington,
D.C. But there are, from time to time, other exhibitions at Smithsonian museums that are worth viewing when in the nation’s capital.
Indian Peace Medals
Currently the National Portrait Gallery has a small alcove highlighting Indian Peace Medals. Included are medals featuring the first seven
U.S. presidents. Among the medals, in silver and bronze, are those designed by John Reich and Moritz Furst.
Accompanying these medals are eleven tinted lithographs from the 1830s done by James Hall and earlier commissioned by Indian affairs
government official Thomas L. McKenney. In each lithograph a Native American is wearing a peace medal.
Perhaps the most stunning is an enormous medal worn by the Seneca chief Sagoyewatha or Red Jacket. The medal was given to him by
President Washington
McKenney understood the importance of such medals, saying that “without medals any plan of operations among the Indians…is essentially
enfeebled. This comes of the high value which the Indians set upon these tokens of Friendship.”
Bronze Reliefs by Augustus Saint-Gaudens
Across the hall from “From Token to Ornament: Indian Peace Medals and the McKenney-Hall Portraits” are several bronze reliefs done by
Augustus Saint-Gaudens. These are of the writer William Dean Howells, architect Charles McKim, Pennsylvania political figure Wayne McVeigh
and painter Kenyon Cox.
Busts by Sculptor Jo Davidson
While at the National Portrait Gallery you can also see some of the sixty busts by sculptor Jo Davidson in the collection. Fourteen of them
are in a room entitled “Jo Davidson: Biographer in Bronze.” Perhaps the most well-known work is a small white medal bust of Franklin D.
Roosevelt from 1934. Davidson also designed the 1945 inaugural medal.
For more on Red Jacket and to see a copy of this lithograph, see: Red Jacket: c.1758 - 1830
(www.oswego.edu/library2/archives/digitized_collections/granger/redJacket.html)
The Smithsonian also produced a video on Davidson: FDR by sculptor Jo Davidson
. (www.youtube.com/watch?v=5l_oAT3ZUa8)
Additional information on Jo Davidson and his interesting career as a sculptor can be found in his 1951 book, Between Sittings: An
Informal Autobiography.
The Indian Peace Medal collection runs through June 2016 and the Davidson exhibit is permanent.
To read the earlier E-Sylum articles, see:
SMITHSONIAN OPENS NEW NUMISMATIC EXHIBIT
(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v18n29a16.html)
WAYNE’S NUMISMATIC DIARY: NOVEMBER 8, 2015 : National Numismatic Collection
Exhibit (www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v18n45a20.html)
Wayne Homren, Editor
The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization
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