The Okie Legacy: Vinnie Ream Hoxie

Soaring eagle logo. Okie Legacy Banner. Click here for homepage.

Moderated by NW Okie!

Volume 9 , Issue 41

2007

Weekly eZine: (366 subscribers)
Subscribe | Unsubscribe
Using Desktop...

Sections
Alva Mystery
Opera House Mystery

Albums...
1920 Alva PowWow
1917 Ranger
1926 Ranger
1937 Ranger
Castle On the Hill

Stories Containing...

Blogs / WebCams / Photos
NW Okie's FB
OkieJournal FB
OkieLegacy Blog
Ancestry (paristimes)
NW Okie Instagram
Flickr Gallery
1960 Politcal Legacy
1933 WIRangeManuel
Volume 9
1999  Vol 1
2000  Vol 2
2001  Vol 3
2002  Vol 4
2003  Vol 5
2004  Vol 6
2005  Vol 7
2006  Vol 8
2007  Vol 9
2008  Vol 10
2009  Vol 11
2010  Vol 12
2011  Vol 13
2012  Vol 14
2013  Vol 15
2014  Vol 16
2015  Vol 17
2016  Vol 18
2017  Vol 19
2018  Vol 20
2021  Vol 21
Issues 41
Iss 1  1-6 
Iss 2  1-13 
Iss 3  1-20 
Iss 4  1-27 
Iss 5  2-3 
Iss 6  2-10 
Iss 7  2-17 
Iss 8  2-24 
Iss 9  3-3 
Iss 10  3-10 
Iss 11  3-17 
Iss 12  3-24 
Iss 13  3-31 
Iss 14  4-7 
Iss 15  4-15 
Iss 16  4-21 
Iss 17  4-28 
Iss 18  5-5 
Iss 19  5-12 
Iss 20  5-19 
Iss 21  5-26 
Iss 22  6-2 
Iss 23  6-9 
Iss 24  6-16 
Iss 25  6-23 
Iss 26  6-30 
Iss 27  7-8 
Iss 28  7-17 
Iss 29  7-21 
Iss 30  7-28 
Iss 31  8-4 
Iss 32  8-11 
Iss 33  8-18 
Iss 34  8-25 
Iss 35  9-1 
Iss 36  9-8 
Iss 37  9-25 
Iss 38  9-22 
Iss 39  9-28 
Iss 40  10-6 
Iss 41  10-13 
Iss 42  10-20 
Iss 43  10-27 
Iss 44  11-3 
Iss 45  11-10 
Iss 46  11-17 
Iss 47  11-24 
Iss 48  12-1 
Iss 49  12-8 
Iss 50  12-15 
Iss 51  12-22 
Iss 52  12-29 
Other Resources
NWOkie JukeBox

Vinnie Ream Hoxie

"I was researching for Robert L. Hoxie in regard to something transpiring in Alva and came across all this rich history. I don't know if you know or have researched this woman or not - a great woman & Artist/Indian from Oklahoma." -- Jan Carver

    "Vinnie Ream Hoxie (September 25, 1847 - November 20, 1914), sculptor, daughter of Robert Lee and Lavinia (McDonald) Ream, was born in Madison, Wisconsin, then a frontier town. Part of her childhood was spent in Washington, D. C., where her father had found employment, but the family later returned to the West, and she attended Christian College, Columbia, Missouri. Here she wrote songs which were set to music and published.

    "Moving again to Washington with her parents during the Civil War, she obtained a minor clerkship in the Post Office department at the age of fifteen. A friend having taken her to the studio of Clark Mills, she laughingly attempted to model a likeness of Mills; the result delighted her and others. Keeping her government position, she thenceforth gave all her free time to the study of sculpture, chiefly under Mills.

    "She was small, slender, bright-eyed, with a wealth of long curls. Her personality was so winning, and the art of sculpture was at that time so little understood in the United States, that within a year, at senatorial solicitation, President Lincoln allowed her to come to the White House, giving her daily half-hour sittings, during five months. She was reverent, impressionable, industrious, gifted, but of course without sufficient training for the commission which, nevertheless, was awarded to her by Congress after a competition, to make a full-length marble statue of Lincoln for the Rotunda of the Capitol. A contract was signed August 30, 1866: $5,000 to be paid on acceptance of the full-size plaster model, and $5,000 on completion of the marble." -- Vinnie Ream Hoxie
  |  View or Add Comments (0 Comments)   |   Receive updates ( subscribers)  |   Unsubscribe


© . Linda Mcgill Wagner - began © 1999 Contact Me