I roughed him out with a double bitted axe and then started carving. Took me almost a month to hollow out the chair and leave the rungs. I’ve got him sitting on a kitchen chair – figured he was a poor cuss, like me, and he’d feel right at home.
Visitors to the Bakersfield, Vermont home of woodcarver Frank Moran would, it is said, often have to take a second glance before realizing that the “person” they saw sitting in the kitchen was actually a life-size wooden figure of Abraham Lincoln. Placed next to the coal stove in a simple, dignified manner, “Old Abe” was fulfilling the only purpose his maker envisioned – keeping him company.
Frank Moran (1877-1967) was a Vermont farmer, carpenter, and woodcarver who, sometime around 1940, transformed a single pine log into his personal vision of an American hero without the help of power tools or even a picture of Lincoln to use as a model (although the influence of Daniel Chester French’s Lincoln Memorial Statue, below, is apparent). It is interesting that Moran depicted the clean-shaven, youthful Lincoln rather than the bearded figure we all know so well. After finding the log on a friend’s farm and dragging it to his home, he seasoned the wood for three years and then carved the figure from memory over a period of another two years. The result was an astonishing likeness, a monumental piece of folk sculpture, and most importantly for the artist, a suitable companion.
Visitors to the Bakersfield, Vermont home of woodcarver Frank Moran would, it is said, often have to take a second glance before realizing that the “person” they saw sitting in the kitchen was actually a life-size wooden figure of Abraham Lincoln. Placed next to the coal stove in a simple, dignified manner, “Old Abe” was fulfilling the only purpose his maker envisioned – keeping him company.
Frank Moran (1877-1967) was a Vermont farmer, carpenter, and woodcarver who, sometime around 1940, transformed a single pine log into his personal vision of an American hero without the help of power tools or even a picture of Lincoln to use as a model (although the influence of Daniel Chester French’s Lincoln Memorial Statue, below, is apparent). It is interesting that Moran depicted the clean-shaven, youthful Lincoln rather than the bearded figure we all know so well. After finding the log on a friend’s farm and dragging it to his home, he seasoned the wood for three years and then carved the figure from memory over a period of another two years. The result was an astonishing likeness, a monumental piece of folk sculpture, and most importantly for the artist, a suitable companion.
Moran had grown up in Bakersfield working on local farms, married in 1895, and worked in Massachusetts as a woodcarver, carpenter, and cabinetmaker. When he moved back to Vermont in 1917 he also took up carriage making. After his father died, Moran moved to his family farm – alone – and lived there in solitude for the last forty years of his life. There was no electricity, no central heating, and no other modern conveniences. The sign above his door read simply “Frank Moran – Woodcarver.”
Moran became well known locally as a “friendly hermit” and despite his need for privacy he greatly enjoyed entertaining visitors with banjo, fiddle, and storytelling. He kept carving too, embellishing useful items like chests, cabinets, and gun stocks, and also making sculpture busts of political figures (Churchill, Eleanor Roosevelt, Stalin, and Hitler, as well as this small standing figure of George Washington, also in our collection). Some of his finest carvings were made for his local church, St. Anthony’s in East Fairfield.
But the life-size seated figure of Lincoln was Moran’s greatest achievement, and one he vowed never to part with. When offered sizeable sums of money for the piece, he would reply that Old Abe “would never stand up – or leave here.” And so Old Abe remained next to the coal stove in Moran’s kitchen until his maker’s death in 1967, after which it found a new permanent home here at the Fenimore Art Museum.
i have a chest carved by Frank W. Moran that i am interested in selling. Do you purchase such items?
ReplyDeletePlease respond to Hoodsmill @earthlink.net
Yes. Please email me at p.dambrosio@nysha.org or call me at 607-547-1413. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteFrank Moran was a relative of mine, it is so cool to see how important part of history he is.
ReplyDeleteAndy Mather
i'd be interested in purchasing some of franks work if available. my dad grew up in bakersville knowing frank. pat lambert (757) 713 7523
ReplyDeleteFrank Moran was my great grandpa. My brother Tim Tracy inherited grandpa Morans carving tools & their chest from our dad Wallace Tracy, also a wood sculptor who learned from grandpa Moran. So glad to see old Abe as we crawled all over him as children!
ReplyDeleteGreat to hear from you! It would be nice to hear more about your recollections of your great grandpa. Please feel to contact me at p.dambrosio@nysha.org. Thanks!
DeletePaul
Frank Moran was my great grandpa. My brother Tim Tracy inherited grandpa Morans carving tools & their chest from our dad Wallace Tracy, also a wood sculptor who learned from grandpa Moran. So glad to see old Abe as we crawled all over him as children!
ReplyDeleteFrank Moran was my great grandpa. My brother Tim Tracy inherited grandpa Morans carving tools & their chest from our dad Wallace Tracy, also a wood sculptor who learned from grandpa Moran. So glad to see old Abe as we crawled all over him as children!
ReplyDelete