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Nicola Marschall

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Name
  
Nicola Marschall


Nicola Marschall httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
1917, Louisville, Kentucky, United States

Nicola Marschall (1829 – February 24, 1917) was a German-American artist who supported the Confederate cause during the American Civil War. He designed the original Confederate flag, the Stars and Bars, as well as the official grey uniform of the Confederate army.

Nicola Marschall Nicola Marschall 1829 1917 Find A Grave Memorial

Biography

Nicola Marschall Nicola Marschall Artist Fine Art Prices Auction Records for

Marschall was born in St. Wendel, Germany, in 1829 to a wealthy Prussian family of tobacco merchants. He emigrated to the United States in 1849 through New Orleans, Louisiana, headed for the home of a relative in Mobile, Alabama. In 1851 he relocated to Marion, Alabama, where he began teaching art first at his portrait studio, and then at the Marion Female Seminary. During this time he briefly returned to Germany to further his art technique.

Nicola Marschall Nicola Marschall Encyclopedia of Alabama

Mary Clay Lockett, wife of prominent Marion attorney Napoleon Lockett, requested Marschall to take part in the competition to create a new flag to represent the Confederate States of America. Marschall's design became the first Confederate flag, first raised in Montgomery, Alabama, on March 4, 1861. During the Civil War Marschall served in the Second Regiment of Confederate Engineer Troops, under Samuel Lockett. After the war he returned to Marion and married Martha Eliza Marshall.

Nicola Marschall Nicola Marschall 1829 1917 AMERICAN GALLERY

During his career he painted portraits of Jefferson Davis, Abraham Lincoln, Otto von Bismarck, various Southern families, and Confederate and Union soldiers. He was one of the few who was able to have Nathan Bedford Forrest pose for him. Additionally, he did many landscapes and religious paintings. He was known to sign and date his portraits using a steel pen while the paint was still wet, at the bottom-right of the portrait.

Nicola Marschall Nicola Marschall and the Walker Family at Cedar Grove

Due to the economic depression in the South following the war, he returned to Mobile in 1872. In 1873 he and his family moved to Louisville, Kentucky, as his friends told him it would be an easier place to gain commissions to do portraits. At the Centennial International Exposition in Philadelphia in 1876, he won a medal for his portraits.

Nicola Marschall Nicola Marschall Biography Artist Painter Germany

In 1908 he gave up working on portraits. He died in Louisville on February 24, 1917, and was interred in Cave Hill Cemetery.

References

Nicola Marschall Wikipedia


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