March 12 - March 18
Artist Clara L. Brown Dyer is this week's Woman of the Week.
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To learn about her by viewing her item, please click on her image.
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To read her biographical sketch in A Woman of the Century, please click on the highlighted page number to the left of her image.
Clara L. Brown Dyer, who was born in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, on March 13, 1849, came from a family with a long history in New England. Her relatives served in the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, and the Civil War. One ancestor (Job Tyler) was reputed to have been the first settler of Andover, Massachusetts, and the Tyler Family Association dedicated a monument in North Andover to his memory in 1901.
As a child, Clara often accompanied her father, a master mariner, on his voyages. One can only surmise that she inherited his love of the outdoors, because Clara distinguished herself as a landscape artist. A resident of Portland, Maine, Clara made many fine sketches of the scenery around Casco Bay as well as in the Sierras and Yosemite Valley. Her work appeared at the Boston Art Club for four successive years, in all the Portland Society of Art exhibitions, and the San Francisco Midwinter Fair exhibition. Having mastered her craft, she also decided to teach drawing and painting at the Westbrook Seminary in Portland, Maine.
In addition to her artistic pursuits, Clara also became a power in Portland's club work. She was notably the organizer and President of the National Society of United States Daughters of 1812, State of Maine, and Third Vice-President of the National Society. Clara also served as one of the directors of the Woman's Literary Union and as a member of the Committee on Resolutions for Portland's Mutual Improvement Club.
Clara passed away on March 1, 1931, and was buried in Evergreen Cemetery, Portland, Maine.