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James Fisk

James Fisk
Artist
Unidentified Artist
Sitter
James Fisk, 1 Apr 1835 - 7 Jan 1872
Date
c. 1870
Type
Photograph
Medium
Albumen silver print
Dimensions
Image/Sheet: 8.8 × 5.8 cm (3 7/16 × 2 5/16")
Mount: 10.1 × 6.2 cm (4 × 2 7/16")
Mat: 45.7 × 35.6 cm (18 × 14")
Topic
Interior
Personal Attribute\Facial Hair\Mustache
Costume\Jewelry\Chain
Costume\Dress Accessory\Neckwear\Tie\Bowtie
James Fisk: Male
James Fisk: Business and Finance\Banking and Finance\Financier
James Fisk: Business and Finance\Businessperson\Broker\Stockbroker
Portrait
Credit Line
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
Restrictions & Rights
CC0
Object number
NPG.76.74
Exhibition Label
Born Pownal, Vermont
President Grant’s eight years in office were unusually plagued by vice and corruption. Two of the first individuals to shake the public’s confidence were James Fisk Jr., who is shown in this photograph, and Jay Gould. In September 1869, they schemed to inflate the price of gold and corner the market. At the height of the panic known as “Black Friday,” Grant ordered the sale of $4 million of gold coin to stabilize the market. Fisk and Gould, however, had managed to involve one of Grant’s in-laws, marring the administration with its first scandal. On January 20, 1872, Harper’s Weekly ran a front-page obituary for Fisk, who had been killed by a “former boon companion.” It published a scathing profile, deriding him as “an eminence of infamy… The crimes, the vices, which he paraded before the public, they conceal behind a mask of affected decorum and hypocrisy.”
Data Source
National Portrait Gallery
Location
Currently not on view