Notes for John Prentiss Benson

!US Census 1900 (11 June) New Jersey, Union Co., Plainfield Ward 2, Roll T623_996, ED 4 SD 126, Sheet 17B, Page 208B, House No. 139 Hillside Ave, Lines 70-75: John P Benson (b. Feb 1865 - 35 - in MA - Occ: Architecht - Fa: MA and Mo: MA) married 6 years to Sarah B. (b. Nov 1868 - 31 - in MA - Fa: Nova Scotia and Mo: NY) having 3 children born and 3 still living. Children listed (born in NJ) are: Philip (son b. Sep 1897 - 2); Marjorie (dau b. Feb 1895 - 5); and Gertrude P. (dau b. Mar 1898 - 2). ALSO LISTED is: Anna Clark (b. Feb 1870 - 30 - in Ireland - Occ: Nurse - Fa: Ireland and Mo: Ireland - NOTE: Came to US in 1890)

!US Census 1910 (15 April) New York, Queens Co., Queens Ward 3, Roll 624_1065, SD 2 ED 1287, Sheet 11A, Page 203A,
House No.
Lines
P John Benson (b. 1865 - 45 - in MA - Occ:
B Sarah (b. 1870 - 40 - in
Marjorie (dau b. 1895 - 15
Phillip (son b. 1898 - 12
W. Gertrude (dau b. 1899 - 11
W. Mary (dau b. 1906 - 4
ALSO LISTED are: Maggie Whiteman (b. 1888 - 22
Susan Crawford (b. 1888 - 22
and Elizabeth Hamilton (b. 1890 - 20

!US Census 1920 (10 January) New York, Queens Co., Flushing, Roll T625_1233, SD 4 ED 221, Sheet 4B, Page 59B, House No. 28, Lines 68-72: John P. Benson (b. 1866 - 54 - in Salem, MA - Occ: Architecht - Fa: Salem, MA and Mo: Salem, MA) married to Sarah (b. 1870 - 50 - in Cambridge, MA - Fa: Nova Scotia and Mo: NJ). Children listed (born in Plainfield, NJ) are: Marjorie (dau b. 1896 - 24); Philip (son b. 1897 - 23 - Occ: Clerk Cotton Office); and Mary W. (dau b. 1906 - 14).

!Material Below were copied from a book about John Benson (John Benson Book ~ P.O. Box 171, Pocasset, MA 02559-0171 - EMAIL: infor@@johnpbenson.org) found on the web site at http://www.johnpbenson.org/jpbenson/aboutjpb.html - - ALL THE MATERIAL from the BOOK are copyright protected (see: http://www.johnpbenson.org/jpbenson/copyright.html):
"John Prentiss Benson was born in Salem, Massachusetts, in February 1865, just two months before the Civil War ended with the surrender of General Lee at Appomattox in Virginia. There were six children born to George Wiggin Benson and Elisabeth Poole Benson between 1859 and 1872. Georgiana, the oldest, was followed by four boys – Frank, John, Henry (Harry), and Arthur. George Benson prospered as a cotton merchant in nearby Boston, and the family lived comfortably in the big white house on Washington Square in Salem. In addition to the excellent education they received in the Salem schools, the Benson children were fully exposed to the cultural and social life of Salem, and they all benefited from attending classes at Art Club, Drawing Club, and Cooking Club. Salem’s harbor and wharves were only a short walk from the house and proved irresistible to the Benson boys, who were by nature both curious and observant. Ships of all descriptions and nationalities frequented the harbor, offloading such exotic cargo as ivory, tea, wine, silk, and Chinese porcelains.
Artistic talent surfaced early in the Benson family, perhaps fostered in part by Elisabeth’s own abilities. Her oldest son recalled that his mother had “a little room” on the top floor of their house where she would go to paint and “forget about the rest of the world.”
When Frank announced his decision to become an artist, he was given his parents’ blessing. John, however, did not have quite the same parental support. Family members like to repeat the anecdote that when John announced that he, too, wished to become an artist, he was told very firmly that one artist in the family was quite enough. He would need to find another profession in which to make his way in the world.
John elected to become an architect. Like his brother Frank, he knew that study in Paris was necessary for success, so he traveled to Paris in 1886, where he enrolled in L’Academie Julian and studied at L’Ecole des Beaux-Arts. When he returned to America in 1889, he quickly found employment at McKim, Mead & White in New York City. His tenure with that firm lasted just a few months. Then he and a fellow architect from his Paris days, Albert Leverett Brockway, formed their own firm, Benson and Brockway. Eventually both men became independent architects, but they continued to collaborate professionally and as friends.
John Benson married Sarah Bissell Whitman in 1893, and the young couple settled at first in Plainfield, New Jersey. Three children were born to the Bensons while they lived in Plainfield. In 1904 the family moved to Flushing, New York, to a handsome shingle house on the corner of Fox Lane and Bowne Avenue. The youngest child, a daughter, was born in 1905.
Although he earned his living as an architect, John Benson never abandoned his dream of being an artist. Images of ships and the sea from his boyhood days in Salem stayed fresh in his mind’s eye, and whenever he could find spare time, he turned to his beloved paints, brushes, and blank canvases with pleasure. The Fox Lane house had a studio which one of his daughters would later describe as having been “the most important room in the house.”
On the occasion of his 56th birthday in 1921, John Benson’s youngest daughter recalled her father’s receiving a telegram from his brother Frank that said, “John, if you are going to paint – PAINT!” The cable itself has long since been lost, but its message was unforgettable. It must have been just the catalyst John needed. Over the ensuing months, John began to phase out his practice as an architect, and in 1922-23, he and Bessie spent the winter in England where he rented a studio and painted seven or eight pictures. He sent them back to the United States, to the Kennedy Galleries in New York City, where six paintings sold immediately.
He never looked back. The following year John and Bessie spent the winter in Bermuda, and then, after selling their Flushing home, in 1925 the Bensons bought a large, handsome white house on the banks of the Piscataqua River in Kittery, Maine. Across the street from this home known as “Willowbank”, John had a studio. He kept careful records in three logbooks of the work he produced while in Maine. It is certain that he painted more than 500 canvases during his years in Kittery, and likely that there are many others for which dates are unknown. His work was exhibited in New York, Philadelphia, and Boston, where he was a frequent contributor to shows sponsored by the Guild of Boston Artists. Visitors purchased many of his paintings on the spot at his studio in Kittery.
John Benson painted right up to the time of his death in November 1947, at the age of 82. He died at home, in Willowbank, and is buried in Salem, beside his beloved Bessie, at Harmony Grove Cemetery. A memorial exhibition of his works was held in 1948 by the Guild of Boston Artists, and twenty years later, in 1968, a retrospective exhibition was held at the Peabody Museum."
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