Rufus Fairchild Zogbaum
Biography
      Rufus Fairchild Zogbaum (August 28, 1849–October 22, 1925) was an American illustrator, journalist, and writer.  He is primarily known as an illustrator for late 19th century news magazines.  His works were regularly featured in Harper’s Weekly magazine.  He was born in Charleston, South Carolina, educated at the Art Students League in New York City from 1878–1879, and during 1880–1882 studied under Léon Bonnat in Paris.
      Harper’s Weekly normally hired freelance illustrators; nevertheless, for a time Zogbaum was on the magazine’s art staff and was sometimes given the assignment to redraw submissions by freelance illustrators, including well-known artists such as Winslow Homer and Frederic Remington, whose first few illustrations for Harper’s were redrawn by staff artists including Zogbaum.  Zogbaum specialized in several areas of illustration.  During his lifetime, his drawings and paintings of horses and military themes (U.S. Army and Navy) were almost as well known as Remington’s.  He was older than Remington and his works had actually influenced the younger artist.  As did Remington, during the Spanish–American War Zogbaum served as an on-the-scene artist-correspondent.  His 1897 book, All Hands: Pictures of Life in the United States Navy, is a collector's item featuring 36 full page illustrations.  He painted a mural of the Battle of Lake Erie in 1910 for the Howard M. Metzenbaum U.S. Courthouse in Cleveland, Ohio.
      Zogbaum and Norman Rockwell both lived and worked in New Rochelle, New York, a well-known art colony especially popular among illustrators of the early twentieth century.  Rudyard Kipling referred to Zogbaum in a poem he sent to then-Captain (later Rear Admiral) Robley D. Evans, U.S. Navy, in 1896:

      Zogbaum draws with a pencil,
      And I do things with a pen.
      And you sit up in a conning tower
      Bossing eight hundred men.

      Zogbaum takes care of his business
      And I take care of mine.
      And you take care of ten thousand tons,
      Sky-shooting through the brine.

      Zogbaum can handle his shadows
      And I can handle my style.
      And you can handle a ten-inch gun
      To carry seven mile.

      “To him that hath shall be given.”
      And that’s why these books are sent
      To the man who had lived more stories
      Than Zogbaum or I could invent.

Bibliography
      All Hands: Pictures of Life in the United States Navy (1897)
      In the Wasp’s Nest: The Story of a Sea Waif in the War of 1812 (novel by Cyrus Townsend Brady, 1902)

Other links
      Wikipedia

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