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Authors: John James Audubon

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DATE
AUTHOR’S LIFE
1769
Jean Audubon serves in French Navy.
1785
26 April: Audubon born Jean Rabin, illegitimately, to ship’s captain and sugar planter Jean Audubon and French chambermaid Jeanne Rabin at Les Cays, Saint-Domingue (Haiti).
1786
Jeanne Rabin dies of infection.
1787
18 January: Lucy Green Bakewell born at Burton-on-Trent, England, first child and firstborn daughter of wealthy country squire William Bakewell and Lucy Green Bakewell.
Audubon’s half-sister Rosa born to Catherine Bouffard, “créole de Saint-Domingue.”
1789
Slaves near rebellion in Saint-Domingue. Jean Audubon sells plantation, buys substantial farm in Pennsylvania—Mill Grove, near Valley Forge—and returns to Nantes.
1791
Jean Audubon’s two illegitimate children arrive in France. His wife, Anne Moynet, welcomes them.
1793
Jean Audubon and his wife formally adopt his children; Jean Rabin renamed Jean-Jacques Fougère (“Fern”) Audubon.
1801
Jean Audubon and family retire to Couëron. William Bakewell family emigrates to America.
1803
August: John James Audubon, 18, arrives in America, settles at Mill Grove.
Bakewell family occupies Fatland Ford.
1804
Audubon and Lucy Bakewell meet at Fatland Ford and begin long courtship.
1805
Audubon sails to France to seek permission to marry Lucy Bakewell. Carries some 120 drawings of French and American birds which he gives to his mentor Charles d’Orbigny.
1806
Audubon returns to America with business partner Ferdinand Rozier, applies for U.S. citizenship, begins business training in New York under Benjamin Bakewell.
1808
5 April: Lucy Bakewell and John James Audubon married at Fatland Ford. With Ferdinand Rozier, they emigrate to Louisville, Kentucky, to operate a general store.
1809
12 June: Victor Gifford Audubon born in Louisville.
1810
Wilson and Audubon meet in Louisville.
Audubons and Rozier move to Henderson, Kentucky. Audubon and Rozier travel by keelboat to Ste. Genevieve, Missouri Territory (“Journey Up the Mississippi”).
1811
Audubon and Rozier dissolve their partnership. Audubons return to Pennsylvania planning to move to New Orleans.
1812
Audubon draws Whip-poor-will and Nighthawk in flight: first successful flight drawings. 3 July: Audubon becomes American citizen; Audubons return to Henderson, floating down the Ohio on William Clark’s barge.
30 November: John Woodhouse Audubon born in Henderson.
1813
Audubon and brother-in-law Thomas Bakewell form partnership to build steam-powered mill at Henderson.
1814
December: girl, Lucy, born to the Audubons; hydrocephalic, she will live less than two years.
1816
Eliza Bakewell, Lucy’s younger sister, marries Nicholas Berthoud.
1818
Jean Audubon dies at Nantes.
1819
Audubon’s business fails; family possessions sold at auction; jailed for debt, takes bankruptcy.
Begins new career as professional artist drawing portraits; continues drawing birds.
Daughter Rose born in Shippingport; dies of fever at seven months.
1820
Audubon joins Western Museum, Cincinnati, as artist and taxidermist. Long Expedition stops over in Cincinnati, views Audubon’s work.
October: Audubon departs Cincinnati by flatboat with assistant Joseph Mason, bound for New Orleans, to collect birds for
The Birds of America
; begins
Mississippi River Journal
.
1821
Audubon arrives in New Orleans.
Paints Fair Incognito.
In June, takes up residence at Oakley Plantation as artist and teacher. Fired in October; returns to New Orleans.
18 October: Anne Moynet dies in Couëron.
Lucy and sons arrive from Shippingport in time for Christmas. At least 31 drawings completed this year for the
Birds
.
1822
Audubon breaks through to new richness of drawing; decides to redraw all his earlier work. Moves to Natchez, where his family joins him in September.
1823
Lucy Audubon opens school at Beechwood Plantation, near Bayou Sarah. Audubon begins preparing to go to Europe to see his drawings engraved.
1824
Audubon travels to Pennsylvania to find work as a teacher and study oil painting with Thomas Sully; meets Charles-Lucien Bonaparte.
In autumn, explores Great Lakes. Returns in November to Bayou Sarah.
1825
Audubon at Beechwood Plantation teaching fencing, drawing and cotillion dancing to raise money for England.
1826
17 May: Audubon, 41, sails for Liverpool; arrives 21 July. Taken up by Rathbone family.
In Edinburgh, William Home Lizars agrees to undertake engraving of
Birds
.
1827
Lucy moves to Beech Grove Plantation. Audubon issues
Prospectus
, moves to London, transfers engraving of
Birds
to establishment of Robert Havell, Sr., and sons Robert, Jr. and George. By year’s end, has more than 100 subscribers, 20 finished plates and £777 due after expenses.
1829
Audubon returns to U.S.A., works through summer at Great Egg Harbor and Great Pine Swamp. In November, reunites with Lucy at Beech Grove.
1830
Audubons sail for England. Audubon elected Fellow of Royal Society of London. In October, begins writing
Ornithological Biography
. First volume of
Birds
completed in December.
1831
Audubons return to U.S.A.; Audubon explores South Carolina and East Florida.
1832
Audubon collects in the Florida Keys, winters in Boston.
Robert Havell, Sr., dies.
1833
Audubon charters schooner, spends summer exploring Gulf of St. Lawrence and Labrador coast, writes
Labrador Journal
.
1834
Audubons return to England in May. Second volume of
Birds
finished, third underway.
1835
Audubon finishes drawings for fourth volume of
Birds
. Third volume published; third volume of
Ornithological Biography
published. Fire in New York destroys pre-1821 journals.
1836
Audubon and John Woodhouse return to U.S.A., work from Nuttall-Townsend Expedition skins in Charleston, dine at White House with Andrew Jackson.
Charles Dickens:
Pickwick Papers
(–1837). Ralph Waldo Emerson:
1837
Father and son explore Gulf westward to Galveston Bay. Meet Sam Houston. John Woodhouse marries Maria Bachman. Audubons return to England.
1838
16 June:
The Birds of America
finished: 435 plates, 1,065 figures.
1839
Last volume of
Ornithological Biography
finished; Audubons return to America. Begin work on lithograph Octavo edition, plan
Quadrupeds
. Victor Audubon and Eliza Bachman married.
1840
Maria Bachman Audubon dies of consumption at 23.
1841
Eliza Bachman Audubon dies of consumption at 22.
1842
Audubons acquire Minnie’s Land on Hudson River at 155 St., Manhattan. Audubon visits Quebec.
1843
Audubon explores Upper Missouri River on American Fur Company steamboat;
Missouri River Journals
.
1846
Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America
begins publication (1846–54).
1847
Audubon disabled by dementia.
1851
27 January: Audubon, 65, dies at Minnie’s Land. Buried in Trinity Cemetery.
1874
Lucy Audubon, 86, dies at Shelbyville, Kentucky, and is buried beside her husband in New York.
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