Thomas Moran


Thomas Moran. Photograph courtesy East Hampton Historical Society.

At age seven, Moran and his family emigrated from England to Philadelphia, where he was apprenticed briefly to a wood engraver. Although best known as a painter, Moran was also a prolific illustrator. In 1862, after a trip to Lake Superior, which inspired a series of views related to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s Hiawatha, he and his brother Edward traveled to England. In 1871 Moran accompanied F. V. Hayden’s geological survey of Yellowstone as a guest artist, with funding from Scribner’s and railroad financier Jay Cooke. During the expedition Moran worked closely with photographer William H. Jackson. In 1872 Moran visited Yosemite and in 1873 joined John Wesley Powell’s geological survey of the Grand Canyon and Colorado River. In 1874 he was again with Hayden in Colorado, where he visited the newly discovered Mount of the Holy Cross. Although most of his life was spent in the East, he traveled west frequently, often as a guest artist of the Santa Fe Railway. (americanart.si.edu)

Primary Medium: Painting, Illustration

Primary Stylistic Term: Figurative, American Western Art, Romanticism, Hudson River School, Nationalist

HAHS Affiliations: Moran was married to etching artist Mary Nimmo Moran. Mary and Thomas knew other artists within the Hudson River School circle, which included Thomas Cole and Frederic Church. Moran’s daughter Ruth met Thomas Moran in the 1940’s.

Recommended Publications: Thomas Moran by Nancy K. Anderson (1997); Thomas Moran and the Surveying of the American West by Joni Louise Kinsey (1992); Thomas Moran and the Surveying of the American West by Joni Louise Kinsey (1992); Frederic Church, Winslow Homer, and Thomas Moran: Tourism and the American Landscape by Dr. Barbara Bloemink, Dr. Gail Davidson, Floramae McCarron-Cates, Dr. Sarah Burns, and Dr. Karal Ann Marling (2006)