PICKLEK
PICKNELL
1861, and served as acting niastev on the U.S.
frigate St. Lawrence of tiie North Atlantic
blockading squadron, 1861-02; was promoted
lieutenant, July 16, 1802: took part in the en-
gagement with the privateer Petrel, and was
present at the engagement of the U.S. fleet with
the Confederate ram Merrimac and the Sewell's
Point batteries. He served on shore duty at
the U.S. Naval academy, and was assigned to
the U.S. ironclad Xtxhant in 1864. He was com-
missioned lieutenant-commander, July 25, 1866,
and commanded the Swatara in European and
West Indian waters, 1865-68; the flagship
Colorado in the Asiatic squadron m 1872; served
on ordnance duty at Washington and at Newport,
1873-75; was promoted commander, Jan. 25,
1875, and was a member of the lighthouse board,
1875-85. serving as secretary, 1881-82. He com-
manded the U.S.S. Kearsarge, 1879-81, and the
U.S.S. Michigan on the northwestern lakes,
1887-89. He was promoted captain, Aug. 4,
1889; was hydrographer of the U.S. navy, 1889-
90; was a member of the board of inspection
and survey, and commanded the cruiser Charles-
ton during a rebellion in Brazil, and the receiving
CHARLE>T0A4
ships Minnesota and Wabash. 1890-98. He was
promoted commodore, Nov. 25, 1898; rear-ad-
miral, March 3, 1899, and succeeded Admiral
Howison as commandant of the Charlestown navy
yard. He died in Boston, Mass., Sept. 8, 1899.
PICKLER, John Alfred, representative, was born near Salem. Ind., Jan. 24, 1844. He removed with his father to Davis county, Iowa, in 1853, and .served in the Federal army, 1862-65, as captain in the 3d Iowa cavalry, and major of the 13Sth U.S. colored infantry. He was graduated from the Iowa State university, Ph.B., 1870, and from the University of Michigan, LL.B., 1872. He removed to JIuscatine, Iowa, in 1874; was presidential elector on the Garfield ticket in 1880, and a representative in the state legisla- ture in 1881. He removed to Faulkton, Dakota Territory, 1883; was a representative in the territorial legislature. 1884, and inspector in the public land service, 1889. He was a Republican representative at large from South Dakota in the 51st-.54th congresses, 1889-97.
^^^^ J>e^^^..c.CC.
PICKNELL, William Lamb, painter, was born
in Hinesburg, Vt., Oct. 23, 1854; son of the Rev.
William and Ellen (Upliam) Picknell; grandson
of Samuel and Sarah (Lamb) Picknell, and
of Joshuah and Mary (Nichols) Upham, and a
descendant of John
Upham, who was
born in England in
1597; came to New
England in 1635, with
his wife and three
children; was one of
the founders of Wey-
mouth, Mass., and
later aided in found-
ing the town of Mai-
den. William L.
Picknell began the
study of art under
George Inness in
Rome in 1872; was
later, 1875-77, a pupil
of Gerome in Paris, and studied in Brittany under Robert Wylie, 1877-81. He exhibited at the Royal Academy, London, and at the Paris Salon, where he received honorable mention in 1880, and in 1882 opened a studio in Boston, Mass. He was elected a member of the Society of American Artists in 1880, of the Society of British Artists in 1884, and an associate of the National Academy of Design in New York city in 1891. He received a silver medal in 1881, and a gold medal in 1884, at the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanics Associa- tion Fair; a medal at the World's Columbian exposition, Chicago, 1893; a gold medal at the Paris Salon in 1895; the Lippincott prize at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in 1896; and a medal at the Atlanta, Ga., exposition in 1896. He was married, April 18, 1889. to Gertrude, daughter of John and Ann (Goodwin) Powers of Boston. His strength biy in landscape work, and prominent among the localities chosen for his subjects are Normandy and the South of France, the new forest in England, the Mexican frontier, Southern California, Florida and the New Eng- land coast. Among the more ini])ortant paint- ings are: Breton Peasant Girl Feeding Ducks (1877); The Fields of Kerren (1878); The Con- carneau Road, in the Corcoran art gallerj-, Washington (1880); On the Borders of the Marsh, in the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (1880); A Stormy Day (1881); Coast of Ipsicich, in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts (1882); Sun- shine and Drifting Sand (1883); A Sultry Day (1884); Wintry March, in the Walker art gallery, Liverpool (1885); Bleak Deomber, in the Metropol- itan Museum, New York (1886); After the Stortn (1886); November Solitude (1887); Edge of Winter (1891); Le Declin de .7our( 1894); A Toiler of the Sea,