Edward Washburn

Edward Payson Washburn (1831 March 26, 1860) was an American painter, son of Indian missionary Cephas Washburn. He is best known for his 1856 work, The Arkansas Traveler. He died in Little Rock, Arkansas, only nine days after his father, and is buried in historic Mount Holly Cemetery at Little Rock.

The Arkansas Traveller, Currier & Ives lithograph

The Arkansas Traveler

The Arkansas Traveler (1856) depicts an encounter between a wealthy traveler and a family of squatters. The painting was created just south of the town of Russellville, Arkansas at the Washburn family homestead site. The Washburn cemetery, near the homestead site, still exists today. The painting was widely distributed as a Currier & Ives lithograph. It was inspired by the humorous song of the same name by Colonel Sanford C. "Sandy" Faulkner (1806–1874).[1]

gollark: I can't actually tell.
gollark: Ah, there's an "IC2 patcher" mod which fixes the jetpack thing, at least.
gollark: If you use a mana enchanter with an AS book which is higher than is allowed, it seems to just drop the "illegal" enchantments. If you use an EIO dark steel anvil, it keeps *some* of them.
gollark: Apparently this last one is an unpatched bug.
gollark: I've been testing it in creative. Main points: the flux-infused armor is actually bad and IC² armor good; AS's higher-than-usually-allowed enchantments interact weirdly with anvils and the mana enchanter, and apparently cannot be applied to quantumsuits, even though they work in anvils; the quantumsuit has a built-in jetpack which cannot be disabled due to ???.

References

  1. Fellone, Frank (June 21, 2015). "Things of the past: Artifacts tell stories of makers and the state". Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Retrieved December 17, 2019.


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