Although not unusual, my parents are related, my father is an 10th cousin to my mother.
They are also related to the famous Revolutionary War American Artist, John Trumbull.


8th Great Grandmother of      Thomas Cushman Gibson
PID: 4935152 Elizabeth Baker
(1612-1666)
9th Great Grandmother of
Sarah Jane Knowlton
PID: 5025154 Thomas Baker
(1636-1718)
PID: 5013230 Priscilla Baker
(1674-1731)
PID: 17127746 Elizabeth Appleton
(1706-1800)
PID: 88310665 Eunice Fairfield Whipple
(1738-1804)
PID: 29729470 Mary Whipple
(1777-1866)
PID: 43189536 William James Cushman
(1809-)
PID: 43181601 Mary C. Cushman
(1839-)
PID: -1898228525 Amy Butler Whitton
(1870-1917)
PID: -1898253703 Joseph Whitton Gibson
(1899-1977)
 
PID: -1898195653 Thomas Cushman Gibson
(1925-1996)
PID: 4982217 Martha Baker
(1643-1670)
PID: 2934929 Sarah Andrews
(1670-1745)
PID: 22709910 Hannah Swett
(1708-)
PID: 22711118 Stephen Swett
(1734-1807)
PID: 22751587 Samuel Swett
(1765-1845)
PID: 22794763 Winborn Adams Swett
(1786-1850)
PID: 80233924 Benjamin F. Swett
(1817-)
PID: 73077023 David Norton Swett
(1842-1914)
PID: 55056891 Isabel N. Swett
(1868-)
PID: -1897936443 Frank Watson Knowlton
(1900-1928)
 
PID: -1898049567 Sarah Jane Knowlton
(1926-)
       My parents are also related to John Trumbull.

PID: 4935152 Elizabeth Baker
(1612-1666)
3rd Great Grandmother of
John Trumbull

 
PID: 40656345 John Trumbull
(1756-1843)

John Trumbull 

(June 6, 1756November 10, 1843), an American artist during the American Revolutionary War famous for his historical paintings including his Declaration of Independence, which appears on the reverse of the $2 dollar bill.

 Early Years

Trumbull was born in Lebanon, Connecticut to Jonathan Trumbull, Governor of Connecticut from 1769 to 1784. He entered the 1771 junior class at Harvard University at age fifteen and graduated in 1773. As a soldier in the American Revolutionary War, Trumbull rendered a particular service at Boston by sketching plans of the British works, and witnessed the famous Battle of Bunker Hill. He was appointed second aide-de-camp to General George Washington, and in June 1776 deputy adjutant-general to General Horatio Gates, but resigned from the army in 1777.

In 1780 he traveled to London where he studied under Benjamin West, who suggested to him that he paint small pictures of the War of Independence and miniature portraits, of which he produced about 250 in his lifetime.

On September 23, 1780 and October 2, 1780, British agent Major John André was, respectively, captured and hanged as a spy in America. News reached Europe, and as an officer of similar rank as André in the Continental Army, Trumbull was imprisoned for seven months in London's Tothill Fields Bridewell.

In 1784 he was again in London working under West, in whose studio he painted his Battle of Bunker Hill and Death of Montgomery, both of which are now in the Yale University Art Gallery.

In 1785 Trumbull went to Paris, where he made portrait sketches of French officers for The Surrender of Cornwallis, and began, with the assistance of Jefferson, Declaration of Independence, well-known from the engraving by Asher Brown Durand. This latter painting was purchased by the United States Congress along with his Surrender of General Burgoyne, Surrender at Yorktown, and Washington Resigning his Commission, and these paintings now hang in the United States Capitol. Trumbull's Sortie from Gibraltar (1787), owned by the Boston Athenaeum, is now in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.

 Middle Years

Trumbull sold a series of 28 paintings and 60 miniature portraits to Yale University in 1831 for an annuity of US$1000. This is by far the largest single collection of his works. The collection was originally housed in a neoclassical art gallery designed by Trumbull on Yale's Old Campus, along with portraits by other artists.[1]

His portraits include full lengths of General Washington (1790) and George Clinton (1791), in New York City Hall, where there are also full lengths of Alexander Hamilton (1805, and the source of the face on the U.S. $10 bill[2]) and John Jay; and portraits of John Adams (1797), Jonathan Trumbull, and Rufus King (1800); of Timothy Dwight and Stephen Van Rensselaer, both at Yale; of Alexander Hamilton (in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, both taken from Ceracchi's bust); a portrait of himself painted in 1833; a full length of Washington, at Charleston, South Carolina; a full length of Washington in military costume (1792), now at Yale; and portraits of President and Mrs. Washington (1794), in the National Museum of American History.[citation needed]

Trumbull's own portrait was painted by Gilbert Stuart and by many others.

In 1794 Trumbull acted as secretary to John Jay in London during the negotiation of the treaty with Great Britain, and in 1796 he was appointed by the commissioners sent by the two countries the fifth commissioner to carry out the seventh article of the treaty.

Later Years

Trumbull was appointed president of the American Academy of Fine Arts, a position he held for nine years, from 1816 to 1825, though he did not get along with the students, and his skills declined. Eventually, his dictatorial behavior led the students to rebel against him and found the National Academy of Design. He published an autobiography in 1841.

He died in New York City at the age of 88. He was originally interred (along with his wife) beneath the Art Gallery at Yale University that he had designed. In 1867, his collection, and the remains, were moved to the newly built Street Hall.[3]

 Paintings

Gallery of Trumbull images