On view at William Corcoran’s home, Washington, DC, ca. 1851–61

On view at William Corcoran’s home, Washington, DC, ca. 1851–61

William Corcoran moved The Greek Slave into the private gallery in his home in Washington, DC, a building that had formerly belonged to Massachusetts statesman Daniel Webster. Corcoran bought it in 1848 and hired architect James Renwick to remodel it. The Greek Slave was accommodated in a special recess at the end of the picture gallery. According to newspaper notices in the 1850s, the gallery was open to visitors on Tuesdays and Fridays from noon to 3 p.m.[1] The Corcoran house was demolished in 1922.




[1] “Correspondence from Baltimore,” Baltimore Sun, August 3, 1852, 4.