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Dinsmoor, Samuel Perry, 1843-1932


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    • Dinsmoor, S. P., 1843-1932
    • Dinsmoor, Samuel P., 1843-1932
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    • found: Historical data relating to the youngest son ... 1993:t.p. (Samuel P. Dinsmoor) p. 1, etc. (Samuel Perry Dinsmoor, b. Ohio, Mar. 8, 1843; Civil War vet.; d. July 21, 1932)
    • found: Kansas Historical Society website, Sept. 19, 2014:Kansapedia > people (Samuel P. Dinsmoor; folk artist, born March 8, 1843, near Coolville Ohio, died July 21, 1932, Lucas Kansas. A retired schoolteacher and farmer, as well as a disabled Civil War veteran, Dinsmoor spent the last 25 years of his life constructing what he called "the most unique home, for living or dead, on earth." In 1907 Dinsmoore built his "cabin home" in the small central Kansas community of Lucas. Using 113 tons of cement, Dinsmoor went on to create the "Garden of Eden," depicting in sculpture his interpretation of the Bible and modern civilization as interpreted through his populist views. He served in the Union army during the Civil War; he taught school for five years in Illinois. On August 24, 1870 he married Mrs. Frances. A. (Barlow) Journey, a widow of considerable means. At some point in time Dinsmoor took up farming, moving to Kansas in the fall of 1888. In 1905 he retired and moved his family into town buying the quarter block in Lucas that was to become the "Garden of Eden." In the spring of 1917 the first Mrs. Dinsmoor died. Alone and deeply involved in the construction of the "Garden," Dinsmoor hired a young Czechoslovakian woman named Emilie Brozek as a housekeeper. When Emilie was twenty years old she married Dinsmoor, who was then 81. The marriage produced two children. Although neither an architect nor an engineer, at age 64 Samuel P. Dinsmoor built his "cabin home." The home itself is quite remarkable, built like a log cabin out of native limestone. With the completion of the "cabin home," Dinsmoor set about to create the intertwining concrete sculptures that became his "Garden of Eden." He erected scaffolding and worked alone, hiring an assistant only to mix cement. He wanted the "Garden" to be durable so he began with steel reinforcements covered with chicken wire. The entire sculpture, which consists of more than 150 statues supported by 29 cement trees, stands approximately 40 feet high. On the west side Dinsmoor depicted his personal understanding of the Bible. The north side of the property tells the story of modern civilization. To further explain his views, Dinsmoor published a small guide book called Pictorial History of the Cabin Home in Garden of Eden)
    • found: Wikipedia, Sept. 19, 2014(Samuel Perry Dinsmoor (March 8, 1843-July 21, 1932) was an United States teacher and eccentric sculptor from Lucas, Kansas. Dinsmoor served in the for three years on the side of the north. Civil War and then taught school in Kansas. When he retired in 1905 he began a second career as a sculptor)
    • found: OCLC, Sept. 19, 2014(access point: Dinsmoor, Samuel Perry, 1843-1932; usage: Samuel P. Dinsmoor; Samuel Perry Dinsmoor; S. P. Dinsmoor)
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    • 1993-10-14: new
    • 2016-05-15: revised
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