Scrutinize the details on a towering Revolutionary War monument in Freehold and you’ll find a young Thomas Edison with the heroine of the Battle of Monmouth. He’s portrayed as thumbing the vent of a cannon barrel as the famed Molly Pitcher rammed the charge.
How did Edison end up on a Revolutionary War monument? It's a bit of serendipity that started with an artist's visit to the inventor's Menlo Park laboratory, just a few weeks before the battle's 100th anniversary in 1878.
Illustrator James Edward Kelly had pitched Scribners Monthly on the story of the man who’d invented a machine where “You talk into it, turn a crank and it repeats what you have said.” Accompanied by a reporter, Kelly took the Pennsylvania Railroad from New York to Menlo Park, a trip he later noted in a memoir he’d hoped to publish of his encounters with famed men. The 22-year-old artist warmed to Edison, not only sketching the 31-year-old inventor at the phonograph for Scribners, but later creating a wax relief he cast in bronze.
Kelly was later commissioned by Maurice J. Power of the
National Art Foundry to draw artwork to be included in an entry in the
competition for a monument to be placed at the site where the Battle of
Monmouth began. Architects Emelin T. Littell and Douglas Smythe envisioned a 90-foot-tall
granite column, encircled by five large brass plaques depicting key moments of
the daylong battle. It was Kelly’s task to illustrate those moments, the most
recognizable being Molly Pitcher manning a cannon in place of her injured
husband.
According to Kelly’s memoir, the Littell/Smythe/Kelly monument design was chosen from a field of more than 60 entrants. Though he’d never worked with the casting process, he successfully lobbied Power for the work of transforming his sketches to the 30-foot long, 6-foot high clay molds from which the bronze panels would ultimately be made.
Edison's a little hard to see, just to the right and above of the man holding the cannonball. The artwork is about 10 feet above the ground, a challenge for the viewer. |
The monument was formally dedicated on November 13, 1884, when Edison’s public persona was in its formative stages. Electric lighting was far from commonplace, and it would be years before the inventor’s work would transform American life. It’s not surprising that I’ve found no indication that his participation was noted at the time.
Edison himself doesn’t seem to have talked much, if at all,
about his brief career as an artist’s model, or his tenuous connection to the
Battle of Monmouth. And while biographies written during his lifetime do
attempt to forge a direct connection between him and a bank official named
Thomas Edison who signed Continental currency, the inventor’s Revolutionary-era
forebear was a Loyalist who moved to Canada after being imprisoned by the New
Jersey government.
Many thanks to historian Joe Bilby, who alerted us to this hidden connection, and to William B. Styple, editor of Kelly’s memoir, Tell Me of Lincoln, for including the artist’s recollections of Edison.