Violet Oakley engraving plates


Collection 3334

(circa 1922-1946, undated)
(28.0 Linear feet ; 100 boxes)

Summary Information

Repository
Historical Society of Pennsylvania
Creator
Oakley, Violet, 1874-1961.
Title
Violet Oakley engraving plates
ID
3334
Date
(circa 1922-1946, undated)
Extent
28.0 Linear feet ; 100 boxes
Author
Finding aid prepared by Sara H. Nash.
Language
English
Abstract
Violet Oakley (1874-1961) was an American illustrator, portraitist, and mural artist, best known for painting the murals in the Senate and Supreme Court chambers of the Pennsylvania State Capitol. She also privately published The Holy Experiment, which illustrated her Harrisburg murals and explained her views, and  The Law Triumphant, based on the journal she kept while in Geneva observing the League of Nations meetings. In her younger years, Oakley was known as one of the Red Rose Girls, a group of illustrators who lived and worked together in Villanova. The group included Oakley, Jessie Willcox Smith, and Elizabeth Shippen Green, all of whom were trained by Howard Pyle at the Drexel Institute. After the marriage of Green, the women and their household moved to the Mount Airy section of Philadelphia. They called their new residence Cogslea, deriving the appellation from the initial of each of their last names. Oakley met her life partner, Edith Emerson, while teaching at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. They resided together at Cogslea for over 40 years.. The bulk of the collection consists of engraved printing plates for Oakley’s 1922 manuscript,  The Holy Experiment, our heritage from William Penn; series of mural paintings in the governor's reception room, in the Senate Chamber, and in the Supreme Courtroom of the State Capital of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. Plates for a few publication subscription letters are also present.

Preferred citation

Cite as: [Indicate cited item or series here], Violet Oakley engraving plates (Collection 3334), Historical Society of Pennsylvania.

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Background note

Violet Oakley (1874-1961 was an American illustrator, portraitist, and mural artist, best known for painting the murals in the Senate chamber and Supreme Court room of the Pennsylvania State Capitol. The youngest of three daughters, Oakley was born in June 1874 to Arthur and Cornelia Oakley of Bergen Heights, New Jersey. In 1881, the family moved to South Orange where their daughters attended private schools. Oakley was descended from artists on both sides of her family and determined at an early age to become a painter. Her formal training began at the Art Students League in New York and continued at the Academie Montparnasse in Paris, France, and in Sussex, England, where she studied under Charles Lasar. The Panic of 1893 badly strained the family's finances, and her father, an investment banker, became ill, causing the family to return from Europe. Soon after, they moved to Philadelphia to seek treatment for Arthur. In 1896, Oakley enrolled in the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, but with the ongoing illness of her father, the tuition proved beyond her means. Oakley then enrolled at the Drexel Institute (now Drexel University) to continue her training. There she studied under illustrator and author Howard Pyle, who connected Oakley with two other artists, Elizabeth Shippen Green and Jessie Willcox Smith, who played important roles in her life. With Pyle's mentorship, Oakley, Green, and Smith, became successful illustrators. The trio rented studios at 1523 Chestnut Street, where they frequently collaborated. In 1899, Caryl Coleman offered Oakley an apprenticeship at the Church Glass and Decorating Company in New York. While there, she designed the art for the chancel of All Angels Church on West 80th Street. This work marked her transition to the large format of murals.

Arthur Oakley’s health continued to decline, and in the last stages of his illness in 1900, Violet converted to Christian Science. Her devotion to her new religion increased over the years and became integral to her art. While her talent for illustration helped her win covers of popular magazines, it was her larger works that caught the attention of Joseph Huston, architect of the Pennsylvania State Capitol in Harrisburg. In 1902, he commissioned Oakley to create murals for the Governor's Reception Room. At the time, it was the largest public commission ever offered to a female artist. The fourteen-scene mural, titled The Founding of the State of Liberty Spiritual, depicted the story of William Penn and the establishment of the colony of Pennsylvania.

By 1902, the careers of Oakley, Smith, and Green were established, and they were able to rent a property in Villanova called the Red Rose Inn. The household included the three women, Oakley’s mother, Green’s elderly parents, and their friend, Henrietta Cozens. The trio became known as the Red Rose Girls. In 1905, the Red Rose Inn was sold, and the new owner declined to renew the lease. The women then leased the dilapidated Hill Farm in the Mount Airy section of Philadelphia. After extensive renovations, they moved into their new home in 1906. They dubbed the property Cogslea, from the initials of their last names.

Oakley’s work garnered her a steady stream of work, including murals for the Charlton Yarnall Mansion and the library of Chestnut Hill Academy in Philadelphia and the Cuyahoga Courthouse in Cleveland, Ohio. Muralist Edward Abbey’s untimely death in 1911 created an opportunity for Oakley. He had the contract for the murals in the Pennsylvania State Capitol, but had not yet begun the Senate and Supreme Court chambers. Oakley was awarded the commission, which affirmed her status as a professional muralist. As a result, she was hired to teach at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (PAFA) in the spring of 1913.

Oakley met her future partner, Edith Emerson (1888-1981), through her teaching at PAFA in 1916. The women became close professionally and personally over the next few years, and in 1917, Emerson became Oakley’s assistant. Emerson moved in with Oakley on March 13, 1918, and the couple designated the date as their anniversary. The women resided together at Cogslea for over 40 years.

The first five of the nine Senate chamber panels were unveiled in February 1917, with the remainder added in 1919 and 1920. Late alterations to the Pennsylvania State Capitol building delayed her work on the Supreme Court chamber commission, and Oakley took on other work and lectures in the interim, including designing the medal for the Philadelphia Award and a triptych, The Great Wonder, for Alumnae House at Vassar. In 1922, she made a privately printed book,  The Holy Experiment, which illustrated her Harrisburg murals and explained her views. The Vassar painting was finished in 1924, and the Supreme Court chamber mural cycle,  The Opening of the Book of Law, was finished and unveiled in May 1927.

Oakley left for Europe soon after the Harrisburg unveiling to begin work on a commission for an altar screen for the Graphic Sketch Club in Philadelphia. The completed reredos, The Finding of Moses, was installed soon after her return from Europe, in February 1930. The other purpose of her trip was to observe the proceedings of the League of Nations, and she attended the September meetings for three years. While in Geneva, Oakley kept a journal, which along with the Geneva drawings  (The Miracle of Geneva) and the Supreme Court murals, became the basis of her next book,  The Law Triumphant, published in 1933. Oakley exhibited the Geneva drawings in many cities in the eastern half of the United States, for which she received some national recognition but little remuneration. She delivered the drawings to the Palais de Nations in fall 1936 and exhibited a painting,  Christ at Geneva, at the Salle Centrale.

Oakley worked steadily in the 1940s, teaching, presenting lectures, and painting. During World War II, she painted portable triptychs for commissions organized by the Citizens Committee for the Army and Navy. The Philadelphia Bulletin hired Oakley to sketch the United Nations delegates in New York in 1946. In the late 1940s, she created ten murals for the First Presbyterian Church of Germantown. Her last major work was the publication of a new expanded edition of  The Holy Experiment in 1950. Violet Oakley died on 25 February 1961 at the age of 86.

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Scope and content note

The bulk of the collection consists of engraved printing plates for a manuscript published by Oakley in 1922, entitled The Holy Experiment, our heritage from William Penn; series of mural paintings in the governor's reception room, in the Senate Chamber, and in the Supreme Courtroom of the State Capital of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. Plates for a few publication subscription letters are also present. The plates are metal mounted on wood in varying sizes, from a small section of a folio page to a full folio page. Most pages were set to be printed in black and red, with a few also utilizing blue. There is one plate per color per page. Images were printed with six colors and plates. The set is nearly complete.

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Administrative Information

Publication Information

 Historical Society of Pennsylvania , 2023.

1300 Locust Street
Philadelphia, PA, 19107
215-732-6200

Access restrictions

The collection is open for research.

Provenance

Provenance unknown.

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Related Materials

Related materials

At the Historical Society of Pennsylvania:

The Holy Experiment (printed volume) by Violet Oakley 1922 (Call number Bd.61.Oa.5)

The Law Triumphant (portfolio) by Violet Oakley 1932 (Call number Bd.61.Oa.5a-b)

The Founding of the State of Liberty Spiritual (portfolio) by Violet Oakley (Collection 3570)

Violet Oakley sketchbooks and pageant drawings (Collection 3336)

At other institutions:

Violet Oakley Papers, Helen Farr Sloan Library & Archives, Delaware Art Museum

Violet Oakley papers, 1841-1981; Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution

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Controlled Access Headings

Subject(s)

  • "The Holy Experiment."
  • Engraving plates.
  • Printing-Early 20th Century-Philadelphia.

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Bibliography

Van Hook, Bailey. Violet Oakley: An Artist's Life. Newark: University of Delaware Press (2016).

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Collection Inventory

Holy Experiment section 1 (1922) 

Box

Edition page, 1 plate (1922) 

1

Page I: Title page, 2 plates (1922) 

2

Page II: Copyright statement, 1 plates (1922) 

2

Page III: Dedication, 2 plates (1922) 

2

Page IV: Publishing information, 2 plates (1922) 

2

Page V: Table of contents, 1 plate (1922) 

Note

Caution: Cracked plate. Handle with care.

3

Page VI: Quote from St. Paul, 1 plate (1922) 

3

Page VII: Introduction, 5 plates (1922) 

4

Page VIII: Introduction continued, 2 plates (1922) 

5

PageIX: Introduction continued, 2 plates (1922) 

6

Page X: Introduction continued, 2 plates (1922) 

7

Page XI: Introduction continued, 2 plates (1922) 

8

Page XII: Introduction continued, 2 plates (1922) 

9

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Holy Experiment section 2 (1922) 

Box

Page [no number]: Title page for the Founding of the State of Liberty Spiritual, 2 plates (1922) 

10

Page 1: Quotes from Emerson's essay "History," 2 plates (1922) 

11

Page 2: Quotes from William Penn's Some Fruits of Solitude, 2 plates (1922) 

11

Page 3: Preface, 2 plates (1922) 

12

Page 4: Preface continued, 2 plates (1922) 

13

Page 5: Preface continued, 2 plates (1922) 

14

Page 6: William Tyndale and smuggling the New Testament into England, 2 plates (1922) 

15

Page 7: Burning of the books at Oxford and William Tyndale's execution, 2 plates (1922) 

16

Page 8: Henry VIII granting permission, Anne Askew condemned, and the development of the Puritan idea, 2 plates (1922) 

17

Page 9: Development of the Puritan idea continued, 2 plates (1922) 

18

Page 10: George Fox and William Penn in study, 2 plates (1922) 

19

Page 11: Penn meets Quaker thought, Admiral Penn turning son from home, 2 plates (1922) 

20

Page 12: Penn's arrest, Penn's trial, Penn's imprisonment, 2 plates (1922) 

20

Page 13: Penn redeeming friends in prison, 1 plate (1922) 

21

Page 13: Penn redeeming friends in prison, 1 plate (1922) 

22

Page 14: Penn's vision, 1 plate (1922) 

21

Page 14: Penn's vision, 1 plate (1922) 

22

Page 15: Penn signing charter and Penn's first sight of Pennsylvania, 2 plates (1922) 

23

Page 16: Penn's letter, 2 plates (1922) 

24

Page 17: University of Oxford shield and inscription, 5 plates (1922) 

25

Page 17B (19): Title page and description for Governor's Reception Room paintings, 2 plates (1922) 

25

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Holy Experiment governor's reception room paintings 1922 

Box

Plate 1, panel 1a and 1b: William Tyndale Printing His Translation of the Bible into English at Cologne A. D. 1525 and  Smuggling the New Testament into England 1526; 5 plates (1922) 

26

Plate 2, panel 2a and 2b: Attempt to Stop the New Learning = Burning of the Books at Oxford 1526 and  "Lord Open the King of England's Eies" - The Last Words of William Tyndale (execution of William Tyndale) 1536; 5 plates (1922) 

27

Plate 3, panel 3a and 3b: The Complete Translation Set Forth With the King's Most Gracyous Licence and  Rather Deathe Than False to Faythe - Anne Askew Condemned to be Burned for Heresy - Refusing to Recant 1546; 5 plates (1922) 

28

Plate 4, panel 4: Rise of Puritan Idea; Intolerance and Persecution Culminate in Civil War 1642; 5 plates (1922) 

29

Plate 5, panel 5; plate 6, panel 6: George Fox on the Mount of Vision - The Voice of One Crying in the Wildnerness 1652 and  William Penn, Student at Christ Church Oxford - He Believed That the Seal of Divinity Had Been Put Upon Him 1660; 5 plates (1922) 

30

Plate 7, panel 7: Penn Meets the Quaker Though in the Field Preaching at Oxford; 5 plates (1922) 

31

Plate 8, panel 8; plate 9, panel 9a: Admiral Penn Denouncing and Turning Him From Home Because of His Sympathy With the Despised Sect of Quakers and  His Arrest While Preaching at Meeting...; 5 plates (1922) 

32

Plate 9, panel 9b: I Would Have Thee and All Other Men to Know... (examination before the lieutenant of the Tower of London); 5 plates (1922) 

33

Plate 9, panel 9c; Plate 10, panel 10: Writing in Prison - "The Great Case of Liberty of Conscience" and  Having Been Liberated by the Force of His Own Writings, He Seeks to Free Other Friends Imprisoned; 5 plates (1922) 

34

Plate 11, panel 11: Penn's Vision; 5 plates (1922) 

35

Plate 12, panel 12; plate 13, panel 13: By the Greatness of Thine Arm They Shall Be As Still As a Stone (King Charles II signs the Charter of Pennsylvania) 1681 and  Thy God Bringeth Thee Into a Good Land... (Penn's first sight of his promised land) 1682; 5 plates (1922) 

36

Border for plate 9, panels 9a, 9b, and 9c: Arrest while preaching at Meeting; Examination before the lieutenant of the Tower of London; Condemnation to imprisonment in Newgate, writing "The Great Case of Liberty of Conscience" (1922) 

37

Border for plate 1, panel 1a and 1b; plate 4, panel 4: William Tyndale and smuggling the New Testament into England; Culmination of intolerance and persecution in Civil War: Rise of the Puritan idea (1922) 

38

Border for plates 2, 3, 7, 11; 3 plates (1922) 

39

Border for plates 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 13; 3 plates (1922) 

40

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Holy Experiment section 3 (1922) 

Box

Page 18: Title page for Creation and Preservation of the Union; 2 plates (1922) 

41

Page 19: Diagram of Senate Chamber; 2 plates (1922) 

42

Page 20: Quote from William Penn; 2 plates (1922) 

43

Page 21: Preface; 2 plates (1922) 

44

Page 22: Preface continued, 2 plates (1922) 

45

Page 23: Preface continued, 3 plates (1922) 

46

Page 24: Legend of the latch string, 2 plates (1922) 

47

Page 25: Slave ship ransomed, 2 plates (1922) 

47

Page 26: Troops of the Revolution 1777, 2 plates (1922) 

48

Page 27: Washington at the Constitutional Convention, 2 plates (1922) 

48

Page 28: Troops of the Civil War 1863, 2 plates (1922) 

49

Page 29: Lincoln at Gettysburg, 2 plates (1922) 

50

Page 30: The Armies of the Earth, striving to take the Kingdom of Peace by violence, 1 plate (1922) 

51

Page 30: The Armies of the Earth, striving to take the Kingdom of Peace by violence, 1 plate (1922) 

52

Page 31: The Slaves of the Earth, driven forward and upward by their Slave-Drivers, 1 plate (1922) 

51

Page 31: The Slaves of the Earth, driven forward and upward by their Slave-Drivers, 1 plate (1922) 

52

Page 32: International understanding and unity, 2 plates (1922) 

53

Page 32: International understanding and unity, 2 plates (1922) 

54

Page 33: Violet Oakley's essay on unity, 3 plates (1922) 

55

Page 34: Violet Oakley's address to the Senate, 4 plates (1922) 

56

Page 35: Violet Oakley's address to the Senate continued, 2 plates (1922) 

57

Page 36: Notes on the legend of the latch string, 2 plates (1922) 

58

Page 37: Notes on the legend of the slave ship ransomed; John Woolman's journal, 2 plates (1922) 

58

Page 38: John Woolman's journal continued, 2 plates (1922) 

59

Page 39: Quotes from the Ten Commandments (1922) 

60

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Holy Experiment senate chamber (1922) 

Box

Introductory page for Senate Chamber prints (1922) 

60

Plate 14: Here Beginneth the Legend of Peace, 3 plates (1922) 

61

Plate 14: Here Beginneth the Legend of Peace, 3 plates (1922) 

62

Plate 15: The Slave Ship Ransomed, 3 plates (1922) 

63

Plate 15: The Slave Ship Ransomed, 3 plates (1922) 

64

Plate 16: Washington Marching Through Philadelphia, 3 plates (1922) 

65

Plate 16: Washington Marching Through Philadelphia, 3 plates (1922) 

66

Plate 17: Let Us Raise a Standard to Which the Wise and Honest Can Repair, 3 plates (1922) 

67

Plate 17: Let Us Raise a Standard to Which the Wise and Honest Can Repair, 3 plates (1922) 

68

Plate 18: General Meade and Pennsylvania Troops, 3 plates (1922) 

69

Plate 18: General Meade and Pennsylvania Troops, 3 plates (1922) 

70

Plate 19: It is For Us the Living Rather to Be Dedicated to the Work, 3 plates (1922) 

71

Plate 19: It is For Us the Living Rather to Be Dedicated to the Work, 3 plates (1922) 

72

Plate 20: The Kingdom of Unity Suffereth Violence and the Violent Would Take It By Storm, 6 plates (1922) 

73

Plate 21: They Did Set Over Them Taskmasters to Afflict Them With Burdens..., 6 plates (1922) 

74

Plate 22: He Carried Me Away to a Great and High Mountain..., 3 plates (1922) 

75

Plate 22: He Carried Me Away to a Great and High Mountain..., 3 plates (1922) 

76

Plate 22: He Carried Me Away to a Great and High Mountain..., 3 plates (1922) 

77

Plate 22: He Carried Me Away to a Great and High Mountain..., 3 plates (1922) 

78

Borders for plates 14 and 15 (1922) 

79

Borders for plates 16 and 18 (1922) 

80

Borders for plates 17 and 19 (1922) 

81

Borders for plates 20 and 21 (1922) 

82

Borders for plate 22, 3 plates (1922) 

83

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Holy Experiment section 4 (1922) 

Box

Page 40: Contributions of Great Federalists in the Progress Toward Unity, red plate (1922) 

84

Page 41: Fragments From the Original Noted Books on the Federal Idea, 3 plates (1922) 

85

Page 42: 2 plates (circa 1922) 

86

Page 43: 3 plates (1922) 

86

Page 44: Letter to Congress in Convention, 2 plates (1922) 

87

Page 45: 2 plates (1922) 

88

Page 46: An Essay Towards the Present and Future Peace of Europe, 2 plates (1922) 

89

Page 47: 2 plates (1922) 

90

Page 48: 2 plates (1922) 

91

Page 49: 2 plates (1922) 

91

Page 50: 2 plates (1922) 

92

Page 51: 2 plates (1922) 

93

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Miscellaneous (circa 1922-1946, undated) 

Box

Holy Experiment announcement letter, 9 plates (circa 1922) 

94

Holy Experiment subscription letter, 5 plates (circa 1922) 

1

Holy Experiment errata slips (circa 1922) 

51

International Supplement to the Holy Experiment, 2 plates (circa 1922) 

1

Unidentified plates, possibly related to the International Supplement to the Holy Experiment (1924, undated) 

53

The Great Wonder, Vassar triptych, 6 plates (1924) 

95

Subscription letter for Law Triumphant, 6 plates (1931) 

96

Note to Edith Emerson (1946) 

75

Brown paper wrappers from engraving plates (undated) 

97

Brown paper wrappers from engraving plates (undated) 

98

Brown paper wrappers from engraving plates (undated) 

99

Brown paper wrappers from engraving plates (undated) 

100

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