Conrad Wise Chapman | |
---|---|
Born |
Washington, DC, USA |
February 14, 1842
Died | December 10, 1910 Hampton, Virginia |
(aged 68)
Nationality | American |
Known for | Painting |
Military career | |
Allegiance | Confederate States of America |
Service/branch | Confederate States Army |
Years of service | 1861 – 1865 |
Rank | Ordnance Sergeant |
Unit | |
Battles/wars |
Conrad Wise Chapman (1842–1910) was a soldier and an artist, mainly known for his paintings of Confederate battlements surrounding Charleston Harbor.
Chapman was born in Washington, D.C. and grew up in Europe where his father, John Gadsby Chapman, was working as an artist.
In 1861, he returned to America and enlisted in Company D, Third Kentucky Infantry, Confederate. He was wounded in Shiloh along with seeing action in Mississippi and Louisiana, before a transfer to the 46th Virginia Infantry at the request of his father to Henry Alexander Wise. Over the next 10 months, he also served with the 59th Virginia Infantry, known as the Wise Legion or Wise Brigade, with both the 46th and 59th at Chaffin's Farm on the James River in Henrico County.
In September 1863, the Wise Brigade was ordered south to take part in the defence of Charleston, South Carolina. Chapman was commissioned to create thirty one paintings of the city's defenses by Brig. Gen. Thomas Jordan, chief of staff to commanding Gen. P. G. T. Beauregard. This was part of a campaign by Beauregard to increase support for his ideas about the defense of the harbor in the Confederate government. Chapman served in the city from early September 1863 to March 1864. He intended to paint the entire series in Charleston, but having received word of his mother's illness, Chapman was granted furlough in April 1864 and left for Rome, Italy to visit his family. It is there that he painted 25 works—with five also done by his father—from sketches he made in Charleston.
After the end of the war, unable to reconcile to the Confederacy's loss, Conrad traveled to Mexico, where he painted a series of views of the Valley of Mexico. He also spent time in France and England. In 1898, his entire collection of paintings went on view at the Union League Club in New York, where they attracted attention, but no buyers. He then moved his family to Richmond where the following year he sold 31 paintings to then Confederate Memorial Literary Society, which later became the Museum of the Confederacy and is now the American Civil War Museum.