This portrait has captured the imaginations of New-York Historical Society visitors. Who was this dapper man, with his seductively villainous good looks? Why this dashing, bold pose for what seems to be an official portrait?
The man is
James inherited the billion-dollar company in 1899 at 23 years old, and his financial success seemed unstoppable (he took directorships at various banks, railroads, and Western Union, and created the investment syndicate James Hazen Hyde &- Associates). This was just one year after he graduated from Harvard, where he studied German and French and gained an appreciation for French fashion and culture. He was a known Francophile, styling his clothing and hair after Parisian trends, and sparing no expense for the pleasure.
Hyde was a creature of the
James’s New York City reputation never recovered, and in December 1905 he sailed for Paris to live in self-exile until 1941, when he returned to New York. He died in 1959, 100 years after his father founded the Equitable Life Assurance Society. He was a founder of the Alliance Francaise in America, received the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor from the French government, and was a member of the Academie des Sciences Morales et Politiques. He was also a member of The New-York Historical Society.
This portrait was taken in 1901, in the midst of his fame and fortune. It was done by French painter Theobald Chartran, who himself has an interesting place in American history! In 1902, Chartran would be commissioned to paint President Teddy Roosevelt’s official portrait, but Roosevelt hated it so much that he hid it in the darkest corner of the house, and eventually destroyed it and commissioned another by John Singer Sargent.
“Theobald Chartran (French, 1849 –1907), James Hazen Hyde (1876-1959), 1901. Oil on canvas. New-York Historical Society, Gift of James Hazen Hyde, 1949.1″-
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