Henry Lloyd I (1685–1763)

From collection Paintings Collection

Henry Lloyd I (1685–1763)

Henry Lloyd I was the second lord of the Manor of Queens Village and the first of the Lloyd family to have a house built on Lloyd’s Neck. The structure, which survives in Caumsett State Park, was completed in 1711, and is where Jupiter Hammon (1711–before 1806), the first published African American poet, was born into slavery and authored his earliest works. In 1750, Henry’s eldest son urged his father to sit for a portrait at his expense. London-born painter John Wollaston executed Lloyd’s likeness from life the following year.

The original Wollaston portrait, which is now lost, likely hung at both the Henry Lloyd and Joseph Lloyd manor houses. This version, signed and dated by American artist John Mare, is a posthumous copy commissioned by Henry Lloyd I’s youngest son, Dr. James Lloyd (1728 –1810) of Boston. In 1767, James wrote to Joseph Lloyd (1716–1780) at Queens Village requesting that his brother oversee the packing of their father’s portrait for Mare to copy in New York City.

Details

Henry Lloyd I (1685–1763)
1767
Oil on canvas portrait of a man wearing a shoulder-length curly white bob wig seated in three-quarter view with one hand on the armrest and the other tucked inside his long brown coat; housed in a dark wood frame with gilt wood fillet and applied brass corner mounts.
Canvas 
Oil 
54 x 44 in. (framed); 48 x 38 in. (unframed)
Signed "Jn.O Mare fecit/1767" middle right edge
This portrait is a posthumous copy commissioned by Henry Lloyd I's youngest son, Dr. James Lloyd (1728–1810) of Boston, Massachusetts after an original painted by John Wollaston (active ca. 1742–1775) in 1750.
Painted for Dr. James Lloyd, Boston, son the subject; his daughter, Sarah Lloyd (Mrs. Leonard-Vassall Borland); her son John Borland; his son John-Nelson Borland, M.D.; his son, John Nelson Borland; his widow, Mrs. J. Nelson Borland, New York. (Mrs. Borland died, July 19, 1959) her daughter, Mrs. Orme Wilson (Alice Borland), Washington, D.C (died 1987); her grandchildren Elsie Wilson Thompson and Orme Wilson III.
2020.5.1
Gift of Orme Wilson III and Elsie Wilson Thompson in memory of Alice Borland Wilson