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Cornelius Hankins

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Occupation
  
Painter

Parents
  
Edward Locke Hankins

Children
  
Hank Fort

Spouse(s)
  
Maude McGehee

Resting place
  
Mount Olivet Cemetery

Full Name
  
Cornelius Haley Hankins

Born
  
July 12, 1863
Itawamba County, Mississippi, U.S.

Died
  
12 May 1946, Nashville, Tennessee, United States

Cornelius Hankins (1863-1946) was an American painter. He painted agrarian landscapes of Tennessee and portraits of Confederate veterans and politicians.

Contents

Early life

Cornelius Hankins was born on July 12, 1863 in Itawamba County, Mississippi. His father was Edward Locke Hankins and his mother, Annie Mary McFadden.

Career

Hankins moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where he was taught painting by Edwin M. Gardner, an art teacher and painter. By 1897, he taught at the Richmond Art Club in Richmond, Virginia. Meanwhile, he began exhibiting his work. By March 1902, his paintings were exhibited at the University Club in March 1902. A decade later, in November 1912, they were exhibited at the Centennial Club.

Hankins painted a portrait of Sumner Archibald Cunningham, the founder of the Confederate Veteran. He also did a portrait of Caroline Meriwether Goodlett, the founding president of the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Additionally, he did a portrait of Confederate General Robert E. Lee for the Tennessee General Assembly in 1901. He also did 15 portraits for the Shelby County Courthouse in Memphis, Tennessee. He went on to do portraits of Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest, Admiral Albert Gleaves, Senator William B. Bate, Governor Albert H. Roberts and Governor Benton McMillin.

Some of Hankins's portraits were donated by Confederate veteran or university alumni groups to public and private institutions. For example, Hankins did a portrait of Confederate General Benjamin F. Cheatham for the Frank Cheatham Bivouac of the Association of Confederate Soldiers, who unveiled it in the Tennessee State Chamber and placed it in the Tennessee State Library in 1904. He also did a portrait of Julia A. Sears, a founding faculty member of the Peabody College for Teachers (now part of Vanderbilt University), which was placed in the chapel in 1904. Additionally, Hankins did a portrait of William Lofland Dudley, the founding dean of the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine; it was donated by local alumni to Vanderbilt University in 1915.

According to the Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, "At the time of his death, nine of his portraits were hanging in the Tennessee State Capitol, six in the Alabama State Capitol, two in the Mississippi State Capitol, and one in the Louisiana State Capitol."

Personal life

Hankins married Maude McGehee. They had two daughters, Eleanor Hankins, known professionally as Hank Fort, who became a renowned singer, and Dorothy Churchill Hankins Wood.

Death

Hankins died on May 12, 1946 in Nashville, Tennessee. He was buried at the Mount Olivet Cemetery.

References

Cornelius Hankins Wikipedia


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