Portrait of Elijah Boardman, a merchant in the Thirteen Colonies around 1745.
Portrait of Elijah Boardman, a merchant in the Thirteen Colonies around 1745.
Elijah Boardman
Portrait of Elijah Boardman, a merchant in the Thirteen Colonies around 1745.
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The Metropolitan Museum
1789
Public Domain
The American Wing
Itinerant portrait painter Ralph Earl depicted the elegantly dressed dry-goods merchant Elijah Boardman (1760–1823) in his shop in New Milford, Connecticut. An unconventional setting for a full-length portrait, the work offered Boardman an opportunity to display his vast merchandise. An open door on the left reveals the shopkeeper’s textile inventory, including silks, wools, printed cottons, and linens—several of which he imported from India, China, and Europe through English ports. Although not pictured, Boardman also sold luxury goods from the Spanish West Indies, such as sugar, rum, molasses, and indigo, connecting the patrons of his Connecticut shop to the extensive networks of Atlantic trade.