Aquatint Print, "High Street, Philadelphia, with an American Stage Waggon," 1795-1807
THF99272 / Aquatint Print, "High Street, Philadelphia, with an American Stage Waggon," 1795-1807
01
Artifact Overview
In the 1790s, Philadelphia was America's most prosperous, populous and cosmopolitan city. It was also the young nation's temporary capital, while Washington, D.C., was being built. This circa 1797 print shows fine homes along High Street (later called Market Street), a major thoroughfare running from east to west through the center of the city.
Artifact Details
Artifact
Print (Visual work)
Date Made
1795-1807
Subject Date
1795-1807
Place of Creation
Creator Notes
Published in Charles William Janson's book "The Stranger in America," London, 1807. Text below image reads : Drawn under the Direction of the Author, and engraved by M. Marigot.
Collection Title
Location
Not on exhibit to the public.
Object ID
82.129.492
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford.
Material
Paper (Fiber product)
Cardboard
Technique
Engraving (Printing process)
Color
Black-and-white (Colors)
Dimensions
Height: 7.75 in
Width: 10.25 in
Inscriptions
Text under image:
High Street, Philadelphia, with an American Stage waggon
In smaller text directly under image:
Drawn under the Direction of the Author, and engraved by M. Marigot
Keywords |
|---|
02
Related Content
SetStagecoach Travel
- 33 Artifacts
In the last third of the nineteenth century, an unprecedented variety of consumer goods and services flooded the American market. Advertisers, armed with new methods of color printing, bombarded potential customers with trade cards. Americans enjoyed and often saved the vibrant little advertisements found in product packages or distributed by local merchants. Many survive as historical records of commercialism in the United States.