Art Prints
Measures 9.25" x 4" x 0.1". Weights .7 oz.
In a certain kind of unique, natural beauty that can only be seen when two rivers converge and become one, the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park is a special tract of land that preserves and conserves the region where the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers meet. This park functions as a nature preserve, but it is also a historical conservation effort too. The park offers museums, hiking trails, historic battlefields, exhibits, and scenic lookouts. Inspired by the beauty and peacefulness of the park, Anderson Design Group handcrafted vintage travel poster art of the park, styling an illustration in fall tones with the rich browns, reds, and yellows that this region is so well known for in autumn. Size: 8 x 10 inch Printed in the USA, on an 80LB environmentally friendly, recycled cover weight paper.
Harpers Ferry is a pleasant and peaceful town in West Virginia. Paths wind through Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, which has 19th-century buildings, a Civil War Museum, and John Brown’s Fort, a key site in an 1859 abolitionist raid. The location where the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers meet, known as The Point, offers views of Maryland and Virginia. The Appalachian Trail Visitor Center has several historic exhibits along the long-distance hiking trail. To celebrate a gem of Appalachia and a beautiful town with so much to see and do, Anderson Design Group handcrafted vintage travel poster art of the park, celebrating the iconic railway tunnel. The famous B&O Railroad Potomac River Crossing Bridge and Tunnel at Harpers Ferry West Virginia are historical and engineering treasures. This vintage poster art and retro illustration will make an excellent addition to home or office decor. Available as a poster, print, and postcard this artwork would also make a great gift for someone in your life who loves retro art! Size: 18 x 24 inch
“Marching to a Monument for Freedom” was commissioned in 1994 by the Harpers Ferry Historical Association and the West Virginia Branch of the NAACP, to accompany “The Call for Justice and the Struggle for Equality: Niagara and Beyond” on exhibit at Harpers Ferry National Historical Park. This 2006 edition marks the centennial of the Niagara Movement meeting held at Harpers Ferry in August of 1906, the first to be held on American soil, and the meeting that became the cornerstone of the modern civil rights movement. The painting portrays a procession of the delegates as they made their pilgrimage to John Brown’s Fort on the morning of Friday, August 17, 1906. Information from the painting came from a variety of sources including photographs of the fort taken in the late nineteenth century, an excellent group photograph of the men taken when they returned from the march, and a description of the morning’s ceremony taken from “Allies for Freedom” by Dr. Benjamin Quarles. John Brown Day began with a sunrise pilgrimage to the Murphy Farm, the site of John Brown’s fort. A light rain fell as the Niagrites, numbering one hundred strong, walked the two miles to the farm. As they neared the small brick building, Owen Waller, a physician from Brooklyn, New York, bent down a respectfully removed his shoes and socks. Others followed his example before treading on this hallowed ground. Following prayers and stirring remarks by Richard T. Greener, former dean of Howard University Law School, the assemblage marched single-file around the fort singing The Battle Hymn of the republic and John Brown’s Body. Richard Fitzhugh is and artist and illustrator who lives in Washington, D.C.11" x 14" - Single matt - unframed
Harpers Ferry is a pleasant and peaceful town in West Virginia. Paths wind through Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, which has 19th-century buildings, a Civil War Museum, and John Brown’s Fort, a key site in an 1859 abolitionist raid. The location where the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers meet, known as The Point, offers views of Maryland and Virginia. The Appalachian Trail Visitor Center has several historic exhibits along the long-distance hiking trail. To celebrate a gem of Appalachia and a beautiful town with so much to see and do, Anderson Design Group handcrafted vintage travel poster art of the park, celebrating the iconic railway tunnel. The famous B&O Railroad Potomac River Crossing Bridge and Tunnel at Harpers Ferry West Virginia are historical and engineering treasures. This vintage poster art and retro illustration will make an excellent addition to home or office decor. Available as a poster, print, and postcard this artwork would also make a great gift for someone in your life who loves retro art! Size: 8 x 10 inch





