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Sherman Foote Denton

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Sherman Foote Denton

Birth
Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio, USA
Death
1937 (aged 80–81)
Wellesley, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Wellesley, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Sherman Foote Denton was a true Renaissance man; a naturalist, traveler, artist, entrepreneur, collector, inventor and author. His interest in natural history encompassed not only fish, but butterflies, moths, insects, birds, fossils, freshwater pearls and gems. During the 1880's, Denton and his brothers accompanied their father, a geologist, on expeditions to Australia, New Zealand and New Guinea where he collected natural history specimens. Upon his return, Denton worked as an artist for the US Fish Commission at the Smithsonian Institute, where he illustrated their reports and also developed and patented a method for mounting fish without them losing their natural colors. He became the leading maker of fish models for collectors and museums, such as the Smithsonian, the Field Museum in Chicago and the Agassiz Museum at Harvard. Denton was hired by the State of NY Fisheries, Game and Forest Commission to illustrate their annual reports, providing the watercolor illustrations for some 100 chromolithographs. Denton's superb drawings vividly illustrated the appearance of live fish, and set the standard for natural history fish illustrations.
(Daniel M. Belz Fine Antique Prints And Art)

Son of William F. Denton (1823-1883) & Elizabeth M. Foote (1826-1916)

Uncle of Vanessa Denton, who is interred nearby
Sherman Foote Denton was a true Renaissance man; a naturalist, traveler, artist, entrepreneur, collector, inventor and author. His interest in natural history encompassed not only fish, but butterflies, moths, insects, birds, fossils, freshwater pearls and gems. During the 1880's, Denton and his brothers accompanied their father, a geologist, on expeditions to Australia, New Zealand and New Guinea where he collected natural history specimens. Upon his return, Denton worked as an artist for the US Fish Commission at the Smithsonian Institute, where he illustrated their reports and also developed and patented a method for mounting fish without them losing their natural colors. He became the leading maker of fish models for collectors and museums, such as the Smithsonian, the Field Museum in Chicago and the Agassiz Museum at Harvard. Denton was hired by the State of NY Fisheries, Game and Forest Commission to illustrate their annual reports, providing the watercolor illustrations for some 100 chromolithographs. Denton's superb drawings vividly illustrated the appearance of live fish, and set the standard for natural history fish illustrations.
(Daniel M. Belz Fine Antique Prints And Art)

Son of William F. Denton (1823-1883) & Elizabeth M. Foote (1826-1916)

Uncle of Vanessa Denton, who is interred nearby

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