|
Matthew Farfan
William
Henry Bartlett was born in London, England in 1809. During his career,
Bartlett made several trips to North America. In the late 1830s,
he traveled around Canada sketching towns, villages, and rural landscapes
in what were then the provinces of Lower Canada, Upper Canada, New
Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. It was at this time that he visited
the Eastern Townships. Ultimately Bartlett's drawings would appear
as a collection of steel engravings in Canadian Scenery Illustrated,
published in London in 1842 by Bartlett and N. P. Willis.
William H. Bartlett. (Source: Canadian Scenery
Illustrated)
Twenty "Bartlett
prints," as they are affectionately called, feature scenes
in and around Sherbrooke, Stanstead, Lake Massawippi, Lake Memphremagog,
Georgeville, Magog, Bolton, and Orford. Though romanticized in their
depictions of the rugged frontier, Bartlett prints nevertheless
represent a major contribution to Canadian pictorial history. They
are also among the earliest depictions of the Eastern Townships.
William Henry Bartlett died at sea in the Mediterranean in 1854
.
Right: Bartlett's "Bridge at Sherbrooke."
(Source: Canadian Scenery Illustrated)
|