A British Officer by John Ramage,
circa 1775 - 1780.
Set in the original gold bracelet mount.
1 5/8 inches high.
John Ramage (1748-1802), Miniaturist, goldsmith and Irish loyalist,
first arrived from Dublin in Boston in 1774 His stay was short; he
enlisted in a Loyalist regiment, moving with them to Halifax. But,
by 1777, Ramage had left his regiment and moved to British-occupied
New York City, where he served the Tories in the same capacity that
Charles Willson Peale ministered to the Revolutionaries. Ramage was,
in fact, "the only artist in New York" according to William
Dunlap. His eminent sitters included Anthony Rutgers, George Clinton, General
Anthony Wayne, General J.J. Van Rensselaer, and George Washington. His portraits
appear to be very like Dunlap's description of him, "...an intelligent
countenance and lively eye. He dressed fashionably and according to the time,
beauishly. A scarlet coat with mother-of-pearl buttons...a white silk waistcoat
embroidered with colored flowers." Ramage set his jewel-like miniatures
in his own gold cases, replete with brightwork engraving, scalloped mats and
fluting, which set a standard for American case work for decades to follow.