Incomparable Scenery
Comparative Views in the White Mountains

The Belknap Mill Society
Sunday, August 15, 1999 through Thursday, September 30, 1999
[Directions and Hours]  [Order the Catalog]


Thomas Hill (1829 – 1908)

TH.JPG (5967 bytes)Thomas Hill came to Taunton, Massachusetts from England in 1841. He studied art with Rothermel at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1853 and with P. Meyerheim in Paris in 1866.  However, Hill was primarily self-taught.  He worked as a carriage painter in the 1840's.  He worked in San Francisco during the years 1861 to 1866 and 1871 to 1908.  He was in Boston during the years 1867 to 1871.   He often traveled to New England in the late 1870's and early 1880's.

Hill exhibited at the following: Art Union, San Francisco, 1865 (prize); Centennial Expo, Philadelphia, 1876 (medal); Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1884 (medal).   During his career, he received 31 awards.  His work has been preserved at the Denver Art Museum, the California Capitol, the Los Angeles Museum of Art, the Worcester Museum of Art, the University of Kansas Museum of Art, the Oakland Museum of Art, and the Currier Gallery of Art. 

He helped Virgil Williams found the San Francisco School of Design in 1874.  He was commissioned by Muir to paint in Alaska in 1887.  He produced nineteen illustrations for Muir's Picturesque California in 1888.  He exhibited at various times at both the Boston Athenaeum and the National Academy of Design.

Hill is best known for his majestic landscapes of California, especially Yosemite.   His brother, Edward, painted throughout his life in the White Mountains, but remained in the shadow of his famous brother.

Thomas Hill was a member of the Boston Art Club and the San Francisco Art Association.   Hill died in Raymond, California.

Our exhibition has a wonderful example of Hill's New Hampshire work -- Eagle Cliff.


The Exhibition
[About the Exhibit]   [Artists]   [Paintings]