Washington Irving strikes up a friendship with …
Years: 1805 - 1805
Washington Irving strikes up a friendship with the American painter Washington Allston while visiting Rome in 1805, and nearly allows himself to be persuaded into following Allston into a career as a painter.
"My lot in life, however", Irving said later, "was differently cast".
Washington Allston had been born on a rice plantation on the Waccamaw River near Georgetown, South Carolina.
His mother Rachel Moore had married Captain William Allston in 1775, though her husband died in 1781, shortly after the Battle of Cowpens.
Moore had remarried to Dr. Henry C. Flagg, the son of a wealthy shipping merchant from Newport, Rhode Island.
Named, like Washington Irving, in honor of the leading American general of the Revolution, Allston had graduated from Harvard College in 1800 and moved to Charleston, South Carolina for a short time before sailing in May 1801 to England, where he had gained admittance to the Royal Academy in London in September; the painter Benjamin West was then the president.
From 1803, he has visited the great museums of Paris and then, those of Italy, where he meets Irving in Rome and Coleridge, who is to become his lifelong friend.
Colerige had traveled to Sicily and Malta in the previous year, working as Acting Public Secretary of Malta under the Commissioner, Alexander Ball, a task he has performed quite successfully, though his opium dependency has only increased.
He has given this up however, and is making his way back to England.
Locations
People
Groups
- Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
- United States of America (US, USA) (Washington DC)
- Italian Republic
- Britain (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland)
