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Bible Encyclopedias
Charles Henry Niehaus

1911 Encyclopedia Britannica

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CHARLES HENRY NIEHAUS (1855-), American sculptor, of German parentage, was born at Cincinnati, Ohio, on the 24th of January 1855. He was a pupil of the McMichen School of Design, Cincinnati, and also studied at the Royal Academy, Munich, returning to America in 1881; in 1885, after several years in Rome, he established his studio in New York City. In 1906 he became a National Academician. His principal works are: a statue of President Garfield, for Cincinnati; the Hahnemann Memorial, in Washington; "Moses" and "Gibbons," for the Congressional Library, and "James A. Garfield," "John J. Ingalls," "William Allen," and "Oliver P. Morton," for Statuary Hall, Capitol, Washington; "Hooker" and "Davenport," State House, Hartford, Connecticut; the Astor Memorial doors, Trinity Church, New York; "General Forrest," Memphis, Tennessee; Generals Sherman and Lee, and William the Silent; "The Scraper; or Greek Athlete using a Strigil"; statues of Lincoln, Farragut and McKinley, at Muskegon, Michigan; a statue of McKinley and a lunette for McKinley's tomb, at Canton, Ohio; and "The Driller," at Titusville, Pennsylvania, in memory of Colonel E. L. Drake, who, in 1859, sank the first oil well in Pennsylvania.

Bibliography Information
Chisholm, Hugh, General Editor. Entry for 'Charles Henry Niehaus'. 1911 Encyclopedia Britanica. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​bri/​c/charles-henry-niehaus.html. 1910.
 
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