Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Taking the Census by Francis William Edmonds, 1854

View through CrossRef
The United States Census of 1850 was the first such survey in this country to require that heads of households provide information on their dependents. The process of interrogation caused a good deal of confusion and inspired numerous jokes. Francis William Edmonds's amusing portrayal features a father making a painstaking effort (counting on his fingers) to give the whitebearded census taker his family statistics, while his giggling children hide from sight. A reviewer who saw the picture at the national Academy of Design exhibition in 1854 described the main character as a "farmer, rough and awkward, reckoning in brown study the number of the boys and girls, evidently more at home in the use of the ox-gad, which lies on the floor, than in figuring." The small portrait print of George Washington just above the father's head evokes not only the genesis of the country's democratic political system but also the by then legendary admonition never to tell a lie. With its carefully delineated interior based on prototypes from Dutch genre scenes, the composition reveals Edmonds at his finest, taking a common moment from the daily life of middle-class Americans and turning it into a moralizing and socially critical tableau.Information taken from http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/2006.457 on May 25, 2012
Rutgers University - Newark School of Public Affairs and Administration
Title: Taking the Census by Francis William Edmonds, 1854
Description:
The United States Census of 1850 was the first such survey in this country to require that heads of households provide information on their dependents.
The process of interrogation caused a good deal of confusion and inspired numerous jokes.
Francis William Edmonds's amusing portrayal features a father making a painstaking effort (counting on his fingers) to give the whitebearded census taker his family statistics, while his giggling children hide from sight.
A reviewer who saw the picture at the national Academy of Design exhibition in 1854 described the main character as a "farmer, rough and awkward, reckoning in brown study the number of the boys and girls, evidently more at home in the use of the ox-gad, which lies on the floor, than in figuring.
" The small portrait print of George Washington just above the father's head evokes not only the genesis of the country's democratic political system but also the by then legendary admonition never to tell a lie.
With its carefully delineated interior based on prototypes from Dutch genre scenes, the composition reveals Edmonds at his finest, taking a common moment from the daily life of middle-class Americans and turning it into a moralizing and socially critical tableau.
Information taken from http://www.
metmuseum.
org/toah/works-of-art/2006.
457 on May 25, 2012.

Related Results

2021 Census to Census Coverage Survey Matching Results.
2021 Census to Census Coverage Survey Matching Results.
The 2021 England and Wales Census was matched to the Census Coverage Survey (CCS). This was an essential requisite for estimating undercount in the Census. To ensure outputs could ...
A supra-annual census interval distorts the interpretation of population dynamics of tropical trees
A supra-annual census interval distorts the interpretation of population dynamics of tropical trees
Abstract Once every few years, tropical rain forests in Southeast Asia experience severe droughts, which kill trees and shrubs. However, the census intervals for forest mon...
Census Divisions - 1951
Census Divisions - 1951
Contained within the 3rd Edition (1957) of the Atlas of Canada is a main map that shows fifteen condensed maps of geostatistical units used by the 1951 Census. The main map shows t...
Finding Jefferson
Finding Jefferson
Abstract This chapter introduces Jefferson Lewis Edmonds, born into slavery in Mississippi in 1852, whose legacy of activism and journalism deeply impacted Black civ...
The ‘New Agenda’ and Human Resource Management: A Roundtable Discussion With John Edmonds
The ‘New Agenda’ and Human Resource Management: A Roundtable Discussion With John Edmonds
John Storey and Nick Bacon discuss trade union reactions to HRM initiatives with John Edmonds and Phil Wyatt.John Storey and Nick Bacon are respectively Senior Lecturer in Human Re...
Detailed Tables from the Dutch Census 1947: Experiences and Lessons Learned in Publishing a Large Dataset
Detailed Tables from the Dutch Census 1947: Experiences and Lessons Learned in Publishing a Large Dataset
Abstract Since the end of the nineties, Dutch census publications have been digitized and made available for digital processing. New analyses of the data were presented in some fru...
Does enumerating undocumented residents in the U.S. census affect congressional apportionment?
Does enumerating undocumented residents in the U.S. census affect congressional apportionment?
Abstract In recent years American political figures, media pundits, and others have argued that undocumented residents in the United States should not be included in...
URBANIZATION IN UTTAR PRADESH: CHALLENGES AND STRATEGIES
URBANIZATION IN UTTAR PRADESH: CHALLENGES AND STRATEGIES
According to the 2011 census, the most populous state in India, Uttar Pradesh, is among those with moderate urban growth but a sharp increase in the number of census towns. Compare...

Back to Top