| Preview | Description | Notes
![]() ![]() | Content | Updated by |
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | Head of a Man 1840 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York, NY | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Mrs. Daniel DeSaussure Bacot ca. 1820 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York, NY | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Susan Walker Morse (The Muse) oil on canvas Metropolitan Museum of Art New York, NY | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | De Witt Clinton 1826 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York, NY | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Cyrus Mansfield ca. 1808 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York, NY | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Eliphalet Terry c. 1824 National Gallery of Art Washington, D.C. | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Lydia Coit Terry (Mrs. Eliphalet Terry) c. 1824 National Gallery of Art Washington, D.C. | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Self Portrait 1812-1813 Addison Gallery of Art Andover, MA | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Jonas Platt 1828 Brooklyn Museum New York, NY | ![]() had been an early promoter of the Erie Canal, and Morse was not only the finest portrait painter in New York, but an inventor as well. A decade after completing this work, Morse retired from his artistic career to devote himself to the development of the telegraph. | GA | Anonymous |
![]() | Portrait of John Adams 1816 Brooklyn Museum New York, NY | GA | Anonymous |
- Samuel F.B. Morse















