1865 Nicholas Longworth Estate Document - Nov 05, 2023 | Riverfront Auctions In Oh
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1865 Nicholas Longworth Estate Document

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1865 Nicholas Longworth Estate Document
1865 Nicholas Longworth Estate Document
Item Details
Description
America, 19th century. A written record of Nicholas Longworth's estate outlining the executors, Joseph Longworth and Larz Anderson (spouse of Nicholas' daughter) following his death in 1863. This document outlines property, taxes, and estate information.

Complete with a red seal of Hamilton County, Ohio.

Anderson was the son of Brevett Major General Nicholas Longworth Anderson and Elizabeth Coles Kilgour Anderson. He was born in Paris on August 15, 1866, while hi Cincinnati, Ohio parents, who had married on March 28, 1865, were on their planned year-long honeymoon, which was extended six months due to the birth of their son. He was the great-grandson of Lieutenant Richard Clough Anderson Jr., who served in the American Revolution. He was also the grandnephew of Brigadier General Robert Anderson, who defended Fort Sumter at the beginning of the American Civil War.

Nicholas Longworth accepted plots of land in exchange for payment in the early 1800s and as the city grew, as did the value of his land. By 1818 he switched from law to real estate due his success and began growing grapes in Mt. Adams due to his belief in Cincinnati’s fair climate for growing. By the 1850s, a journalist from the London Illustrated News noted his preference for Longworth’s Catawba and how it "transcends the Champagnes of France.” Eventually he was named “The Father of American Grape Culture.” Longworth can be noted as an abolitionist and aided runway enslaved individuals, being the possible inspiration for Harriet Beecher Stowe’s “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” He was also extremely invested in the arts, making contact with every artist in Cincinnati between 1829 and 1858. The aficionado also helped artists grow with financial aids, introductions, and commissions. As the first resident of what now stands as Taft Museum of Art, Longworth hired Robert S. Duncanson to paint eight large landscape murals within the villa, which launched his career. The Longworth family lives on as a prominent Cincinnati name, including Maria Longworth Storer of Rookwood Pottery and her father Joseph Longworth, first president of the Cincinnati Art Museum.

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1865 Nicholas Longworth Estate Document

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