Gabriel Harrison
Quick Facts
Biography
Gabriel Harrison (March 25, 1818 – December 15, 1902) was an American photographer, actor, playwright, painter, and writer active in New York City. Born in Philadelphia to an engraver father, Harrison came to New York with his family at age six. He made his theatrical debut in 1838 as the title character in Shakespeare's Othello opposite Lester Wallack. Harrison began his photography career in the gallery of John Plumbe around 1844, and worked for Martin M. Lawrence from 1847 to 1851. He moved to Brooklyn in 1851, opened his own gallery in in Brooklyn in 1852, and remained in photography until the early 1860s. His notable photographs include a daguerreotype of Walt Whitman that was engraved in the title page of Leaves of Grass, and California News, a daguerreotype noted for its staged narrative rather than being a simple portrait. His written works include a dramatization of Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter and biographies of actors John Howard Payne and Edwin Forrest. He supported free art schools in connection with the Brooklyn Academy of Design, of which he was a founder, and was also a portrait and landscape painter. He died in Brooklyn at age 84, and his children include daughters Viola and Beatrice and son George Washington Harrison.
Works
Steel engraving of Walt Whitman by Samuel Hollyer, after a lost daguerreotype by Harrison
Edwin Forrest as Metamora
Plays:
- The Scarlet Letter (1876)
Books:
- The Life and Writings of John Howard Payne (1875)
- A History of the Progress of the Drama, Music and the Fine Arts in the City of Brooklyn (1884)
- Edwin Forrest: The Actor and the Man (1889)