Thomas Jefferson

Charles L. Hogeboom American

Not on view

Hogeboom worked as a surgeon in Utica, Long Island, and Brooklyn. For a time, he served as the president of the Oneida Medical Society, and he was a frequent contributor to general scientific magazines. He also produced sculpture in his free time; his obituary in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle noted that it was known to all as a "labor of love." Hogeboom’s subjects of choice were early statesmen including George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and Benjamin Franklin. The author of an 1889 article in the Magazine of History, with Notes and Queries observed that Hogeboom was well-respected for his series of bronze medallions of American statesmen. Hogeboom donated this plaster intaglio (hollow relief) sculpture, along with one of Franklin (acc. no. 85.16.1) to The Met in 1885. During the 1880s he frequently made gifts of his sculptures to institutions he wanted to honor, among them Brooklyn City Hospital, the Brooklyn County Court House, Princeton University, and his alma mater, Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons.

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