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Portrait study of William Thomas Tonner Image 1

Portrait study of William Thomas Tonner

Date
Date unknown
Medium
Oil on canvas board
Credit Line
Gift of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 2015
Dimensions
20 x 16 in.

Description & Inscriptions

[verso label 1 of 3, in black ink]: Violet Oakley [space] OP64 [in red ink] / Preliminary study / William Thomas Tonner / Oil sketch on canvas board / 16x20 [in red ink]; [verso label 2 of 3, in black ink]: 122 [in triangle]; [verso label 3 of 3, in black ink]: P-877
William Thomas Tonner (1878-1948) was owner and operator of a successful hosiery mill in Lansdale, PA. In 1908 he married Florence Foerderer and around 1915 the couple moved into the mansion at Glen-Foerd, an 18th-century estate in Torresdale purchased by his in-laws in 1895. Located along the Delaware River in the far northeast section of Philadelphia, Torresdale offered a scenic community for country estates. Like other successful businessmen of the day, Tonner established a “gentlemen’s farm,” located across from the estate in 1919. It became known for its Ayrshire cattle, winning numerous awards for the animals’ milk output. Tonner was a member of the Union League, the Philadelphia Club, the Philadelphia Country Club, the Corinthian Yacht Club and the Lutheran Church of the Holy Communion, in Philadelphia. His wife was a noted patron of the arts. They had two daughters and a son. Glen Foerd Farms no longer exists. The eighteen-acre estate, however, still does and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is the only remaining riverfront estate in Philadelphia open to the public.

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