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Catalogue Entry

inv. 478
View of the City of Bangor, ME
Copyright 1835 by William A. Gilman and Alex H. Wallace
Lithograph on white woven paper
16 1/16 x 26 15/16 in. (40.8 x 68.4 cm) Sheet: 20 1/2 x 30 in. (52 x 76.4 cm.)
Inscribed across bottom: Printed under image left to right:
From a drawing by A. H. Wallace Pendleton's Lithogy Boston

Copyrighted by William A. Gilman and Alexander H. Wallace, 1835

A Pendleton lithograph after a drawing by Alexander H. Wallace.
Commentary

This print, from the drawing by Alexander H. Wallace, and unsigned, was first attributed to Lane by Carl Crossman in his essay of 1985. It was printed by Pendleton's Lithography.

In 1835, Bangor was one of Maine’s largest and most prosperous cities, deriving its wealth from abundant forest resources and shipbuilding. Located on the Penobscot River, the city lay 24 miles north of the river’s mouth at Belfast Bay, itself an arm of Penobscot Bay. The distance from Bangor to Castine is approximately 35 miles. Wide and deep (but with a few tight channels), the river facilitated the shipping of lumber by sea for seven months out of the year, with minimal use of costlier overland transportation. Come winter, the river froze putting a stop to shipping lumber, but the shipyards remained busy, providing employment for a large part of the population. Many coastal traders would make their final voyages of the year to distant ports, finding short-haul work in those regions until spring, then return to the Penobscot region in spring.

Without recourse to the original drawing by Alexander H. Wallace, it is impossible to judge how accurately and artistically it was rendered, and how much it was changed by Lane. It is evident that the foreground vegetation, the dramatic sky, and above all, the detailed rendering of the vessels were Lane’s work. The city’s street layout is very geometric, but made less obvious by its irregular topography which Wallace’s drawing must have conveyed with accuracy.

The nautical aspects of this image show Lane’s knowledge of sailing ships in the fine detail of their hulls, sails, and rigging. Note the natural folds and wrinkles in the sails of the schooner in the foreground. While loading at wharfside, the sails are partially hoisted to dry, having been soaked with heavy dew as happens so often along the Maine coast. Without ever having visited Bangor, Lane would have known well these vessel types, so commonly were they seen in Boston and Gloucester delivering lumber from those ports.

While vessels are busy at wharfside loading lumber, the river shows numerous timber rafts coming from upriver, to be taken apart and their individual logs cut into lumber. Sawn lumber can be seen on the wharf in the foreground, to be loaded on the schooner at wharfside. Many of the schooners in this view are topsail schooners – rigged with square topsails on their fore masts to increase sail area for faster sailing downwind, and to steady their motion in heavy seas.

There remains a mystery about the original draftsman of this image, Alexander H. Wallace – and his co-owner of the copyright, William A. Gilman. Neither name has as yet been found in any directory of American artists, or of businesses in Bangor.

– Erik Ronnberg

Reference:  
George S. Wasson and Lincoln Colcord, “Sailing Days on the Penobscot” (Salem, MA: Marine Research Society, 1932), pp. 3–29, 33–37.

Supplementary Images
View of the City of Bangor, ME, Copyright 1835 by William A. Gilman and Alex H. Wallace (inv. 478). Viewpoint Map for inv. 478
Viewpoint Map for inv. 478
Photo: © U S Coast Survey Chart

Historical Materials

Below is historical information related to the Lane work above. To see complete information on a subject on the Historical Materials page, click on the subject name (in bold and underlined).
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map
"Continuation to Bangor" Map
U S Coast Survey Chart

Filed under: Bangor »

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Maine Locales & Buildings: Bangor
map
"Continuation to Bangor" Map
U S Coast Survey Chart
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map
Penobscot River and Belfast Bay Map
U.S. Coast Survey Chart, NOAA Historic Chart Collection, 1882
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Pendleton's was the first lithography shop in Boston and created some of the finest prints from the time period. The firm was founded by brothers, William S. and John Pendleton, in 1826 at Harvard Place. Prior to this firm, William Pendleton had founded the Senefelder Lithographic Company in 1825 with Abel Bowen. (The 1831 Gloucester map was printed by the Senefelder Lithographic Company, and perhaps provided an introduction for Lane to Pendleton.) In 1828, John left Boston to pursue various opportunities in Philadelphia and New York. In the absence of his brother, William built Pendleton's into a well-regarded lithographic shop until 1835 when he sold the shop to his bookkeeper, Thomas Moore. At Pendleton's, many prominent artists were taught, including John H. Bufford, Robert Cooke, Nathaniel Currier, and Lane. The artists at Pendleton's were responsible for producing a variety of materials including maps, plans, portraits, fashion plates, topographical views, music covers, advertisements, and historical prints.

Much of this information has been summarized from Boston Lithography 1825–1880 by Sally Pierce and Catharina Slautterback.

map
1831 Mason Map
John Mason
1831
Lithograph
28.5 x 21 in.
Cape Ann Museum Library & Archive

When Massachusetts decreed that each town be mapped, John Mason drew the map of Cape Ann in 1830. This drawing was sent to the Senefelder Lithographic Company of Boston (owned by William Pendleton) to be printed, and then sold in Gloucester by W.E.P. Rogers, whose Gloucester Telegraph of February 12, 1831 announced, "A few specimen copies of the map, uncolored, have reached the town" and that they cost $1.25. Perhaps this business arrangement between Pendleton and Rogers provided Lane with his introduction to Pendleton.

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publication
1865 Gloucester Telegraph
1865
Newspaper

"Mr. Lane in his early youth exhibited uncommon proofs of capacity by drawings of wonderful vigor and truthfulness so that they attracted the notice of some of the best judges, among others of Mr. Pendleton, the pioneer of lithography. who took a genuine interest in the young artist and invited him to Boston where greater opportunity could be afforded him for study and improvement. This great promise of early life was fully redeemed in riper years when, self-taught, he mastered the difficulties of the art and took place in front rank of the marine painters of this country. An afflicting malady which crippled him for life prevented him taking extensive journeys for picturesque material but whenever it wass possible for him to reach striking and characteristic views of our coast he visited them and the number of fine works distributed throughout the country show with what judgement he selected his subjects and how happily he rendered them."

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artwork
A Brief Ejectment: Xenophon's Retreat out of the Enemy's Country
David Claypoole Johnston
c.1827
Lithograph
7 1/2 x 9 in.
Courtesy American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass.

One of the Pendleton brothers kicking Russell Jarvis out the door of the printing establishment.

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artwork
Lithography W. & J. Pendleton, No. 1 Graphic Court, Washington Street
J. Cheney
between 1827 and 1830
Lithograph
3 7/8 x 2 3/4 in., on sheet 5 1/8 x 3 7/8 in.
Courtesy American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass.

Subject: Advertising card for the Boston lithography firm. A woman sits at a desk, writing on a writing slope. Copied from a vignette signed R. Lane on the title page of C.J. Hullmandel's Art of Drawing on Stone, 1824.

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artwork
Old State House in Flames
Robert Salmon
The Bostonian Society (1883.0107)
lithograph
1832
"Salmon pinxt" at lower left; "Pendleton, Boston" at lower right

Also filed under: Salmon, Robert »   //  State House »

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publication
Sixty Years' Memories of Art and Artists
Benjamin Champney
c.1899
Woburn, MA,

"After a time I left the shoe store, and through the influence of my friend Cooke, was admitted as an apprentice to Moore, successor to Pendleton, in the lithographic business. Here I was speedily worked in as a draughtsman for ordinary commercial work, the fine work, such as designs of figures and heads from life being done by Cooke. F.H. Lane, afterwards well-known as a marine painter, did most of the views, hotels, etc. He was very accurate in his drawing, understood perspective and naval architecture perfectly, as well as the handling of vessels, and was a good, all-round draughtsman." (1)

(1) John WilmerdingFitz Henry Lane (Gloucester, MACape Ann Historical Association2005)Reprint of Fitz Hugh Lane, by John Wilmerding. New York: Praeger, 1971.

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artwork
Soft Glides the Sea, Bounding and Free
Pendleton's Lithography
1831
Lithographic sheet music
11 x 7 1/4 in.
Boston Athenaeum
Image: Boston Athenaeum
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artwork
The Massachusetts Horticultural Society membership certificate
c.1829
Lithograph
Printed by Pendleton's
18 3/8 x 15 5/8 in.
Boston Athenaeum
Image: Boston Athenaeum

Also filed under: Horticultural Hall »

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artwork
View of Lowell, Mass.
Elliza Ann Farrar
1834
Lithograph
Printed by Pendleton's
14 1/8 x 23 5/8 in.
Boston Athenaeum
Image: Boston Athenaeum

Also filed under: Lowell, Mass. »

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Provenance (Information known to date; research ongoing.)
See IMPRESSIONS tab for individual provenance.
Exhibition History
1976 Worcester Museum
Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, Massachusetts, New England Prints Before 1850, April 7–May 16, 1976.
1977 Boston Athenaeum
Boston Athenaeum, Boston, The Fountainhead of American Lithography: Prints from the Pendleton Shop 1825-1836, February 1977. (Impression: Boston Athenaeum (inv. 420)).
Published References
Crossman 1985
Crossman, Carl L. "Lithographs of Fitz Hugh Lane." In American Maritime Prints, edited by Elton W. Hall. New Bedford, MA: The Whaling Museum by the Old Dartmouth Historical Society, 1987, p. 74, fig. 7 p. 77 (Impression: Boston Athenaeum (inv. 420)).
Craig 2006a
Craig, James. Fitz H. Lane: An Artist's Voyage through Nineteenth-Century America. Charleston, SC: The History Press, 2006, fig. 20, text, p. 51, as View of the City of Bangor, Maine (Impression: Boston Athenaeum (inv. 420)).
Impression Information
Related Historical Materials
Record last updated May 7, 2024. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
Citation: "View of the City of Bangor, ME, Copyright 1835 by William A. Gilman and Alex H. Wallace (inv. 478)." In Fitz Henry Lane Online. Gloucester, MA: Cape Ann Museum. www.fitzhenrylaneonline.org/catalogue/entry.php?id=478 (accessed on August 24, 2025).