Title: McComas Collection, 1955-2013
ID: SpC/2005.50.4
Primary Creator: McComas, Henry Clay (1875-)
Extent: 1.0 Boxes
Arrangement: Series
Date Acquired: 06/21/2005. More info below under Accruals.
Subjects: death masks, life masks, Masks (Sculpture)
Languages: English
Accruals: 2012.13, copies of the comdemnation records from the Smithsonian.
Use Restrictions:
Copyright: McDaniel College may hold copyright to sections of this material.
McDaniel College makes no representation that it is the owner of any copyright or other literary property in the materials contained in its archives, manuscript collections, and special collections unless specifically stated, (b) that in providing access to or permitting the reproduction of any such materials, McDaniel Archives does not assume any responsibility for obtaining or granting any permission to publish or use the same, and (c) that the responsibility (i) for determining the nature of any rights, and the ownership or interest therein, and for obtaining the appropriate permissions to publish or use and (ii) for determining the nature of any liabilities (including liabilities for defamation and invasion of privacy or publicity) that may arise from any publication or use, rest entirely with the researcher.
Copying: Papers may be copied in accordance with the Archives usual procedures.
Acquisition Source: Art Department
Acquisition Method: Transfer
Related Materials: RG25 - Office of the President Lowell Ensor Papers: letters between Lowell Ensor and Phil Myers concerning the donation of the McComas's masks; letter to Dr. Henry McComas from Lowell Ensor thanking him for the collection of masks.
Preferred Citation:
McComas Collection, SpC2005.50.4; McDaniel College Archives, Westminster, Maryland
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French aristocrat who served as a general under George Washington in the American Revolutionary War. On his return to France at the National Assembly he was appointed Commander-in-chief of the Paris militia of Garde nationale. The Garde national, a reaction to the violence leading up to the French Revolution, was militia set up in many French towns whose members came from the middle class and was separate from the French Army. As the French revolution spun out of control, Lafayette, who presented the first draft of the "Declaration of the Rights of Man" at the National Assembly backed away. Declared an enemy of the state by France, he tried to return to the United States. Captured by the Austrians he spent five years in jail.
Toward the end of the French Revolution Lafayette's wife was imprisoned in France. Adrienne de Lafayette was released in January, 1795 with the aid of James Monroe's wife Elizabeth.
General and commander of the Confederate States Army of Northern Virginia during the United States Civil War. Lee began his career in the military when he entered the United States Military Academy. He graduated second in his class. When war broke out with Mexico, Lee was attached to General Winfield Scott. During his tour in Mexico he met Longstreet, Jackson, and Pickett who he would fight with in the Civil War and Grant who he would surrender to at Appomattox, Virginia.
After the Civil War Lee became president of Washington College in Lexington, Virginia. The College changed its name to Washington and Lee University in 1870.
Lawyer, politician, and sixteenth president of the United States. Abraham Lincoln began his political career when he ran for the Illinois Assembly in 1832. In 1846 was elected to the State Legislature. He declared in 1854 his hatred of slavery because of its monstrous injustice and it deprived the American Republic of being an example to the world. This was the year he also first ran for United States Senator from Illinois. Though he lost he cobbled together what was left of the Wig party, those disenchanted with the Free Soil and Liberty parties, and anti slavery Democrats and influenced a new Republican party. This party nominated him in 1858 as their candidate for United States Senator from Illinois. His opponent was incumbent Steven Douglas. Their seven debates were widely covered and Lincoln became nationally known. Lincoln won the 1860 election for the presidency of the United States. By the time of Lincoln's inauguration seven Southern States had seceded from the Union.
Lincoln was assassinated April 15, 1865 - 42 days after his second inauguration and six days after General Lee surrendered to General Grant at Appomattox.
Born in France in 1769, Brunel escaped to America during the French Revolution. In the United States he was involved in linking the Hudson River with lake Champlain, a scheme that never happened. He submitted plans for the Capitol Building in Washington, D.C. They were not selected. In 1796 he became an American citizen and was appointed as chief engineer of New York City.
Brunel designed a way to manufacture pulley blocks used on sailing vessels. He sailed to England to present his design to the British Admiralty. He was made a fellow in the Royal Society and in the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. He was knighted in 1841 by Queen Victoria for his work on the Thames Tunnel. The Thames Tunnel is in use to day as part of London's Underground system.