Frederick Hill Meserve

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Frederick Hill Meserve

Birth
Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
25 Jun 1962 (aged 96)
Bronx, Bronx County, New York, USA
Burial
Bronx, Bronx County, New York, USA Add to Map
Plot
Lot 7010, Lawn Plot.
Memorial ID
View Source
Frederick Hill Meserve (November 1, 1865 - June 25, 1962), was a businessman and collector of historical photographs and Lincolniana, was born in Boston, Mass., the son of William Neal Meserve, a Congregational minister, and of Abigail Burnham Hill. The American Missionary Society sent the family to California, where William Meserve was active in founding several churches between 1868 and 1876. The family then returned to the East for a time and, while his father was pastor of several churches in the Boston area, Meserve completed his secondary education.

Frederick studied medicine for a time in Boston, but gave it up to go with his family to Colorado. The vigorous life of an outdoorsman appealed to him, and he spent extensive periods during 1887 and 1888, sometimes alone, atop Pikes Peak as an observer for Harvard University in an experiment to determine an appropriate site for an astronomical observatory.

In 1888 Meserve entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. While there he was a reporter for the Boston Globe and Herald, writing college news; he also worked part-time for an engineering firm. He left college in 1892, without graduating, to become the western manager for an engineering firm. In 1893 Meserve moved to New York City to join Deering, Milliken, and Company, a textile commission firm. He remained with the firm for the rest of his life, although at one point he held a seat on the New York Stock Exchange with the brokerage firm of Charles W. Turner (1909-1919).

On Nov. 6, 1899, Meserve married Edith Turner; they had three children.


Meserve's interest in old photographs began while he was collecting illustrations for a manuscript of his father's Civil War diary. Using income from his business ventures, he became a zealot in collecting photographs and negatives from the period 1850-1900, especially photographs of Lincoln. The collection eventually contained more than 200,000 pieces. The extensive collection of Lincoln photographs was used by Jules Roiné during his work on the Lincoln Centennial Medal and by Victor Brenner, the designer of the head on the Lincoln penny.

In 1911 Meserve had a book entitled Photographs of Abraham Lincoln privately printed. In 1917 four sets of a twenty-eight-volume work, Historical Photographs, were produced; two more sets were made in 1944. The six extant sets of this work contain several hundred otherwise unpublished photographs of figures from government, education, and entertainment of the last half of the nineteenth century. Carl Sandburg assisted Meserve in the publication of The Photographs of Abraham Lincoln (1941).

Through his activity as a collector, Meserve discovered several "lost" photographs of Lincoln and preserved thousands of photographs of public figures that provide a visual record of a segment of American life in the nineteenth century. This collection was generously made available both to professional historians and interested nonspecialists. Meserve died in New York City.

This bio a collection of bios published and also collected from several sources on the web.

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Orig. Bio entered...Mix of both in work...

The major and largest collector of and authority on Abraham Lincoln photographs and his family, Frederick Meserve was the predominate expert on the family, Abe Lincoln. His reputation on the history of the Lincoln's and the collection of photos was known world wide. His collection was envyed by many people and prominate museums. His Father, William had lived thru the terrible Battle of Gettysburg, meeting Pres Lincoln, which started young Fredrick's obsession and search for EVERY photograph of Abraham Lincoln. It is this collection that gives us Lincoln's profile on the U.S. penny, his portrait for the Five Dollar Bill, but it also gave us the face for Abe's statue at the Lincoln Memorial and for the Mount Rushmore Portrait. They were all from photos the Meserve collection provided to the creators of those memorials... Pictures he collected help to uncover the history of the family, with the help of Meserve's daughter, Dorothy Meserve Kunhardt, a famous author herself of children's books, and books on Abraham Lincoln's family, with many illustrated with photos from her father's collection. Five generations will be dealing with this collection for a long time. A testament to his determination and stamina.

[This memorial is in work... We are trying to expand this history and documentary of his life's work on this collection. If you come across or wish to help contribute, please email me thru the tabs above. Just updated his burial location. June, 2018 New stone photo coming... Thank you volunteer in NY., NYCDoug.]

Frederick Hill Meserve (November 1, 1865 - June 25, 1962), was a businessman and collector of historical photographs and Lincolniana, was born in Boston, Mass., the son of William Neal Meserve, a Congregational minister, and of Abigail Burnham Hill. The American Missionary Society sent the family to California, where William Meserve was active in founding several churches between 1868 and 1876. The family then returned to the East for a time and, while his father was pastor of several churches in the Boston area, Meserve completed his secondary education.

Frederick studied medicine for a time in Boston, but gave it up to go with his family to Colorado. The vigorous life of an outdoorsman appealed to him, and he spent extensive periods during 1887 and 1888, sometimes alone, atop Pikes Peak as an observer for Harvard University in an experiment to determine an appropriate site for an astronomical observatory.

In 1888 Meserve entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. While there he was a reporter for the Boston Globe and Herald, writing college news; he also worked part-time for an engineering firm. He left college in 1892, without graduating, to become the western manager for an engineering firm. In 1893 Meserve moved to New York City to join Deering, Milliken, and Company, a textile commission firm. He remained with the firm for the rest of his life, although at one point he held a seat on the New York Stock Exchange with the brokerage firm of Charles W. Turner (1909-1919).

On Nov. 6, 1899, Meserve married Edith Turner; they had three children.


Meserve's interest in old photographs began while he was collecting illustrations for a manuscript of his father's Civil War diary. Using income from his business ventures, he became a zealot in collecting photographs and negatives from the period 1850-1900, especially photographs of Lincoln. The collection eventually contained more than 200,000 pieces. The extensive collection of Lincoln photographs was used by Jules Roiné during his work on the Lincoln Centennial Medal and by Victor Brenner, the designer of the head on the Lincoln penny.

In 1911 Meserve had a book entitled Photographs of Abraham Lincoln privately printed. In 1917 four sets of a twenty-eight-volume work, Historical Photographs, were produced; two more sets were made in 1944. The six extant sets of this work contain several hundred otherwise unpublished photographs of figures from government, education, and entertainment of the last half of the nineteenth century. Carl Sandburg assisted Meserve in the publication of The Photographs of Abraham Lincoln (1941).

Through his activity as a collector, Meserve discovered several "lost" photographs of Lincoln and preserved thousands of photographs of public figures that provide a visual record of a segment of American life in the nineteenth century. This collection was generously made available both to professional historians and interested nonspecialists. Meserve died in New York City.

This bio a collection of bios published and also collected from several sources on the web.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Orig. Bio entered...Mix of both in work...

The major and largest collector of and authority on Abraham Lincoln photographs and his family, Frederick Meserve was the predominate expert on the family, Abe Lincoln. His reputation on the history of the Lincoln's and the collection of photos was known world wide. His collection was envyed by many people and prominate museums. His Father, William had lived thru the terrible Battle of Gettysburg, meeting Pres Lincoln, which started young Fredrick's obsession and search for EVERY photograph of Abraham Lincoln. It is this collection that gives us Lincoln's profile on the U.S. penny, his portrait for the Five Dollar Bill, but it also gave us the face for Abe's statue at the Lincoln Memorial and for the Mount Rushmore Portrait. They were all from photos the Meserve collection provided to the creators of those memorials... Pictures he collected help to uncover the history of the family, with the help of Meserve's daughter, Dorothy Meserve Kunhardt, a famous author herself of children's books, and books on Abraham Lincoln's family, with many illustrated with photos from her father's collection. Five generations will be dealing with this collection for a long time. A testament to his determination and stamina.

[This memorial is in work... We are trying to expand this history and documentary of his life's work on this collection. If you come across or wish to help contribute, please email me thru the tabs above. Just updated his burial location. June, 2018 New stone photo coming... Thank you volunteer in NY., NYCDoug.]