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Image Not Available for Returned Volunteer: How the Fort Was Taken
Returned Volunteer: How the Fort Was Taken
Image Not Available for Returned Volunteer: How the Fort Was Taken
Artist/Maker (American, 1829 – 1904)

Returned Volunteer: How the Fort Was Taken

1864
Place madeNew York, New York, United States, North America
Painted plaster
Overall: 20 x 14 x 9 in. ( 50.8 x 35.6 x 22.9 cm )
Gift of Miss Miriam Egbert Greenwood School in memory of her father, Mr. George Drew Egbert
1940.845
In September 1863, in the midst of the Civil War, Rogers wrote that he was working on a new group that he expected to be his most popular yet. He had just begun using bronze master models to cast his sculptures, which allowed him to create larger and more complex compositions that approach paintings in their detail and narrative power. Here he depicted a triumphant returning soldier visiting the local blacksmith, whose tools he is using to recount a battle; he has made a fortification on the floor at right, and a horseshoe and nails at left represent the opposing battery. The soldier is every bit the conquering hero, handsome, fervent, and still in full uniform. However, he crouches at the right of the composition, and the blacksmith stands at the apex. His age is indicated by his baldness and glasses, but he is of brawny and classicized proportions; veins bulge in his arms, and he is physically larger than the soldier, particularly when the two men's hands are compared. He easily rests his hammer on his anvil and watches the soldier's tale being played out on the floor of his workshop. At left a little girl shyly raises her apron to her mouth in a childlike gesture while grasping one of the blacksmith's mammoth fingers in her hand. Rogers was known for celebrating the everyday honor and courage of rank-and-file soldiers. But in this sculpture it is unclear exactly who the hero is; Rogers gave equal prominence to the older man who presumably stayed at home plying his trade and caring for his family. Rogers himself did not volunteer to serve and may have had a personal stake in ennobling both the civilian and the soldier (his draft notice arrived in April 1865, just weeks before the war ended). Rogers conceived the group a few months after the New York draft riots. March 1, 1863, marked the passage of the Enrollment Act, instituting the first Union draft. It was meant to encourage volunteering, but it backfired tragically. The law allowed draftees to commute their service by paying a fee of three hundred dollars or by hiring a substitute, and many complained that the dispensation made the conflict "a rich man's war, but a poor man's fight." For four days in July, New York erupted in a rampage of looting and violence in protest, resulting in 105 dead. Perhaps in response, Rogers offered a reassuring example of a vital young man returned safely home after a Union triumph, while also affirming the importance of those who stayed behind. Ultimately, it proved one of his most popular groups and remained in his sales catalogue until 1889, long after he had stopped offering his other Civil War subjects for sale.
DescriptionGenre figure
MarkingsIncised on front of base: "RETURNED VOLUNTEER / HOW THE FORT WAS TAKEN"
ClassificationsSCULPTURE
Rip Van Winkle Returned
John Rogers
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1928.34
The Fugitive's Story
John Rogers
1869
1927.51
The Balcony
John Rogers
1879
1929.103
Politics
John Rogers
1888
1929.93
Sharp Shooters
John Rogers
1862
1936.713
A Frolic at the Old Homestead
John Rogers
1887
1929.88
Polo
John Rogers
1879
1927.50
School Days
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1877
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Coming to the Parson
John Rogers
1870
1929.102