The Cox Mural in the Capitol
In the late 1960s, the National Society of the Daughters of the American
Revolution and the United States Capitol Historical Society jointly sponsored
a project to foster a greater awareness and appreciation of our nation’s past by
recording the American story on the walls of the United States Capitol.
Allyn Cox, who had completed the Rotunda friezes begun by Constantino Brumidi in
the 19th Century, was commissioned for the project.
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Planning for the House wing murals began during the winter of
1969-70. After deciding to place them on the vaulted ceilings, Cox completed
scale drawings of the proposed murals, making sure they were historically
accurate and in harmony with the building’s architecture. He began the
actual work on the ceilings in February 1973, with the “Hall of Capitols”
series. Aided by Clifford Young, who helped work up the cartoons
(preparatory drawings), he completed the series in July 1974.
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This first phase of the project, funded by the U.S. Capitol
Historical Society, tells the story of the Capitol and includes paintings of the
16 buildings in which Congress and its predecessors have met since 1754.
Other panels contain scenes set in or around the halls of Congress and portraits
of persons associated with the Capitol.
“New Dome Symbolizes Union”
One of the murals in the Hall of Capitols depicts Capitol Architect Thomas
U. Walters showing his plans for the building’s new dome to President Abraham
Lincoln. Cox used an 1863 photo of the dome under construction (attributed to
famed Civil War photographer Matthew Brady) as the basis for the scene.
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Construction on the dome, authorized by Congress in 1855, was
interrupted by the Civil War, but began again in 1862 under Lincoln’s order that
construction be continued as “a sign we intend the Union shall go on”. The
last section of the “Freedom” statue atop the dome was put in place on December
2, 1863, at which time the U.S. flag was unfurled and a 35-gun salute (one for
each state, north and south) was fired.
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The Artist
When I was very young, my parents brought me here and showed me an empty
space in the frieze under the Rotunda dome. After that I used to dream and
dream of painting it one day.
--Allyn Cox, quoted in The Washington Post, 28 Sept 1982
Allyn Cox (1896-1982), a native of New York City, was the son of artists
Kenyon and Louise Howland King Cox. He began his art training under his
father and later studied at the National Academy of Art, the Art Students League
and at the American Academy in Rome. In 1953, he realized his
childhood dream when he was commissioned to complete the Brumidi friezes.
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This was just the beginning of his work in the Capitol; he returned
in 1969 to clean and restore one of the Brumidi murals and later painted the
Henry Clay portrait in the Senate Reception Room and the
1969 moon landing in the Senate wing’s Brumidi Corridor. Cox began
working on the House wing murals in 1969, completing The Hall of Capitols in
1974 and the second phase, the Great Experiment Hall, in 1982. He retired
in March 1982 at the age of 86 and died the following September.
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Some of Cox's major projects include murals at the following institutions:
Dumbarton Oaks, Georgetown, Washington, DC
General U.S. Grant National Memorial (“Grant’s Tomb”), New York City
William
Andrews Clark Memorial Library, University of California at Los
Angeles, CA
Royal Arch
Room &
Memorial Hall
George Washington
Masonic Memorial, Washington, DC
For more information about the US Capitol, its art, including the Allyn
Cox, murals check out the:
US Capitol Historical Society's
History and Exhibits site
Sources
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The American Story in Art: The Murals of Allyn Cox in the U.S. Capitol.
Washington, DC: National Society of the Daughters of the American
Revolution and United States Capitol Historical Society, 1986.
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Anderson, Ward. “Capitol Muralist Steps Down from Lifelong Scaffold”.
The Washington Post, 20 Mar 1982.
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The Capitol: A Pictorial History of the Capitol and of the Congress.
Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1981.
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Horan, James D. Mathew Brady: Historian with a Camera. New
York: Crown Publishers, Inc., 1955.
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Smith, J.Y. “Allyn Cox Dies; Works Included Capitol Murals”.
The Washington Post, 28 Sept 1982.
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Websites included above
Photo Credits
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Cartoon photo by Tim Barcus, Truman State University Campus Photographer
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Mural photo courtesy of US Capitol Architect & US Capitol
Historical Society
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Conservation photos by Heugh-Edmondson
Back to "Lincoln and the Dome" Main Page
The Cartoon & the Conservation Process