Portraits of the Governors of Connecticut

Governor WeickerThe State of Connecticut officially embarked upon the acquisition of works of art in 1800 when the Legislature commissioned a portrait of George Washington from the Philadelphia artist John Trumbull. In 1830, a likeness of former governor and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wolcott, Jr. was presented to the State and hung in the State House in New Haven.

By the mid-nineteenth century the State had acquired portraits of numerous former governors and lieutenant governors, including some of the colonial period. It has become a custom of the Legislature to appropriate funds to have portraits made of governors after their departure from office.

The collection of Governors' portraits resided in the State House until 1878, when the current State Capitol building was constructed. In 1910, the State Library was completed and the museum's Memorial Hall became the repository of the collection.

Among the artists whose works are represented in the portrait collection are Ralph Earle, George Wright, Charles N. Flagg, Deane Keller, and Herbert Abrams.

Today seventy-one portraits are on public display. The most recent addition, a portrait of former Governor Lowell P. Weicker, Jr., by Connecticut artist Herbert Abrams, was unveiled on May 22, 1996.

Prepared by the Museum of Connecticut History, Connecticut State Library, 11-96.