Copyright © 2021 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett
In 1883, Thomas G. Moses and Lemuel L. Graham were painting together as Graham & Moses. That year, they both returned to work for Sosman & Landis.
Lemuel Laken Graham was born on July 4, 1846, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He was the son of the Rev. Daniel McBride Graham and Ursula Graham. Rev. Rev. Graham who purportedly placed Lemuel in a scenic art apprenticeship as a young age, yet Graham first appears in newspapers as a performer. Regardless of Graham’s introduction to the theatre, by 1870, L. L. Graham was touring with J. A. Lord’s Chicago Dramatic Co. Graham and playing the role of Sir Charles Marlowe in “She Stoop’s to Conquer.” By the fall of that year, Graham was performing in “Frou-Frou,” On November 22, 1870, the “Leavenworth Times” reported that Mary Graham was also part of the company. Elizabeth Martha “Mary” was Lem’s first wife. The two enjoyed a brief marriage and were divorced later that year.
On February 4, 1871, the “Junction City Weekly Union” mentioned Mr. L. L. Graham as personifying “Jem Dalton, the tiger.” The newspaper article reported that Graham “did it well,” adding, “He is a young man of talent, and we believe a true artiste.” On January 12, 1872, the “Daily Commonwealth” noted that Graham again appeared with Louie Lord’s Dramatic Company in their production of “Our American Cousin,” as well as a touring with the production “Buffalo Bill,” the production and not the performer. During the early 1870s that Graham transitioned from a performer to a scenic artist and worked at McVicker’s’ Theater in Chicago.
After Chicago, Graham traveled quite a bit, working in San Francisco, Cleveland, Memphis and New Orleans.
On May 14, 1875, the Van Wert Weekly in Ohio, reported “Mr. L. L. Graham, a scenic artist, is painting a number of scenes for Gilliland’s Opera House, and, also, a new drop curtain. The Union School building will be the central figure on the drop curtain, around which will appear the advertisements of a number of leading firms” (page 3).
On September 17, 1875, New Orleans’s “Times-Picayune” reported, “The Academy of Music, always first to open and last to close, has been entirely renovated, a new proscenium and ceiling put up, which is being decorated by Mr. L. L. Graham, the Academy’s scenic artist, who, by-the-by, showed us some fine specimens of his art during the last season, repainted all over, new carpets, and other modern improvements.”
On October 16, 1875, the “New Orleans Republican” reported that L. L. Graham painted the drop curtain for Bidwell’s Academy of Music, “representing Tasso at the Court of Ferrara. Graham’s new drop was to be “unrolled for the first time.” By December 26, 1875, the “New Orleans Republican” mentioned Graham again in connection with the Academy of Music’s scenic attributes: “The truly sublime piece of scenery in the transformation scene is the handiwork of Mr. L. L. Graham, the skillful artist, who gets up some very grand effects, and it riveted the gaze of the spellbound audience.”
On Jan 20, 1876, the “Times-Picayune” credited Graham with painting the scenery for “Dead to the World” at the Academy of Music, reporting “The play will be ornamented with new scenery from the brush of Mr. L. L. Graham, whose handiwork has ere now received its need of popular applause.” Graham remained associated with the Academy of Music until the late 1870s when he returned to Chicago and worked with Henry C. Tryon. In 1876 Graham also partnered with Tryon to deliver a new drop curtain and stock scenery to an opera house in South Bend, Indiana. An article in the “South Bend Tribune” on August 9, 1876, reported, “L. L. Graham of the Academy of Music in New Orleans, La., and Henry C. Tryon, of McVicker’s Theater of Chicago, scenic artists, are engaged at the opera house in painting a new drop curtain, a wooded landscape, a place scene, a parlor scene and others.” This seems to be a turning point for Graham as he becomes increasingly connected with the Chicago theatre scene.
By 1881, Graham was working at the Academy of Music in Chicago. It is at the Academy that Moses secures a part-time position painting with Graham. This is in addition to Moses’ working on staff at Sosman & Moses. In fact, Moses is the first employee that Joseph Sosman hires and the two go on the road, completing one project after another contracted by Perry Landis. Upon each return to Chicago, Moses seeks additional employment, including that with Graham at the Academy of Music. There are two other things to consider at this time. The first is that Moses likely met Graham at McVicker’s, as each worked for Lou Malmsha by the late 1870s. The second thing to consider is that Moses’ younger sister was part of the stock company at the Academy of Music when Graham was painting there in 1881.
By 1882 Graham was also known as the scenic artist for Chicago’s Standard Theatre. Moses worked for Graham at both locations. That same year, the two partnered and establish the scenic studio of Graham & Moses. Of the partnership, Moses wrote, “We got together and I quit the firm after refusing a big salary – that is, for me. Our first contract was at Kalamazoo, Michigan. The Academy of Music. We worked night and day. I did all the foliage and I was astonished on seeing my stuff set, to see how I improved.” Kalamazoo’s Academy of Music was a 1250-seat opera house located on South Rose Street. After Kalamazoo, Moses and Graham completed a project in Grand Rapids, Michigan for Redmond’s Opera House, also built in 1882 and later known as the Grand Opera House.
While in town, Moses wrote that Graham fell in love with the head waitress at his boarding house. The two were married two years later on November 20, 1884. The Kalamazoo waitress was Elizabeth “Lizzie” West (b. 1860). Of Graham’s new wife, Moses wrote, “she proved to be a good wife and good mother.” The Grahams celebrated the birth of three children, Rachel (b. 1884), Ethel (b. 1892) and Revard Parker (b. 1895). Lizzie was actually Graham’s third wife. His first marriage to the actress Mary Graham ended in divorce by 1870. The original divorce decree was destroyed in the Great Chicago Fire, prompting that another be reissued before Graham’s marriage to Lizzie. On April 17, 1884, the “Inter Ocean” reported, “Martha Elizabeth Graham of Cumberland, Maine, filed a petition in the Circuit Court yesterday for the restoration of a decree of divorce. The decree was rendered against her on November 30, 1870, in the Circuit Court of Cook Country in favor of Lemuel L. Graham and was destroyed by the great Chicago fire.” On April 17, 1884, the Inter Ocean announced new suits in the circuit court reporting, “48.111 – Lemuel L. Graham vs. Elizabeth Graham. Bill to restore decree of divorce.” Confirmation of Graham’s divorce from his first wife was necessary as Graham planned his fall marriage to Lizzie. What’s interesting is that Graham also divorced his second wife just before his third marriage too. In 1884 Lemuel L. Graham severed marital ties with his second wife, Nellie H. Graham. The divorce was reported in the San Francisco Examiner. On October 28, 1884, the announcement stated, “Judge Maguire has granted Nellie H. Graham a divorce from Lemuel L. Graham, willful neglect and desertion.”
From 1882 to 1883, Moses & Graham completed several projects throughout the Midwest. In 1882, they journeyed to Elgin, Illinois, after completing scenery for the Kalamazoo and Grand Rapids opera houses. In Elgin, scenic artist John H. Young joined the pair to paint. Moses had previously worked with Young as a decorative painter on several Michigan projects. Young later settled in New York and became one of the top Broadway designers during the first two decades of the twentieth century. The next 1882 project for Moses, Graham and Young was located in Racine, Wisconsin. They painted stock scenery for the Black Opera House. By this point, Moses wrote, “Graham and I were doing much better now, and we had two good jobs at the same time. He was a regular Shylock, a good fellow and a hard worker, but altogether too close to please me.”
As the workload increased for Moses & Graham, the two founders focused on separate jobs, with Moses remaining in Racine while Graham and Young departed for Hannibal, Missouri. Graham and Young were painting at the Opera House in Decatur, Illinois by the summer of 1883. On July 28, 1883, The Saturday Herald reported, “L. L. Graham, the scenic artist, has been engaged in this work for three weeks. He has been assisted by John H. Young, of Chicago. Mr. Graham has had 17 years of experience in this line of painting. He and his assistant left last night for Chicago, whence they go to do the same kind of work at Boyd’s Opera House in Omaha, and finally the New Gillis Opera house in Kansas City.”In 1883, Moses ventured to Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Both Moses & Graham and Sosman & Landis were also competing for the same project. Moses wrote, “I met Mr. Landis there. I got the contract. We rode to Chicago together and met Mr. Sosman on our arrival. We were offered $45.00 a week. I wired Graham at Burlington. He answered $50.00 and extras. We closed for that. I had Oshkosh to finish, which I did and May 1st found Graham, Young and myself back on Clark Street at the Sosman and Landis Studio.” Graham only remained at Sosman & Landis for a year. In 1884 he left to partner with William P. Davis in Kansas City, Missouri. Davis was also a former Sosman & Landis employee, having worked as Moses’ assistant.
The new firm of Graham & Davis became an affiliate of the Sosman & Landis Studio, effectively managing a regional branch for the Chicago firm, referred to as the Kansas City Scenic Co. The regional branch for Sosman & Landis in Kansas City did not require any listing in the Kansas City newspaper, or any regional advertisements. To do so would have placed them in competition with Graham and Davis’ firm. Sosman & Landis simply needed an address and potential studio space for the increasing project load associated with the western region. The larger firm relied on western subcontractors and scenic contracts that were completed in studios other than their main Chicago space. Even in Chicago, Sosman & Landis managed several annex spaces to complete an ever-increasing project load.
In Kansas City, Graham & Davis lasted for less than two years, when Davis withdrew and returned to Chicago. Although business was booming in Kansas City, projects were more lucrative in large metropolitan areas. This is why Graham would also leave Kansas City and venture east a few years after Davis. In 1887, Davis was listed in the Chicago Directory, living at 850 W. Madison and working as a scenic artist, associated with the Auditorium Theatre and Grand Opera House. Davis later moved to Minneapolis where he became one of three founders of the Twin City Scenic Co. Graham maintained his relationship with Sosman & Landis, representing the Chicago firm in 1887 when they subcontracted Graham to deliver scenery to the opera house in Winfield, Kansas.
On October 19, 1887, the “Daily Tribune” reported, “There were several firms competing for the work, but the contract was let to Sosman & Landis of Chicago, New York and Kansas City. Their representative Mr. L. L. Graham who is in charge of the Kansas City branch had a miniature stage in which he showed the various scenes and explained in detail of the workings of the scenes.” Graham also represented Sosman & Landis for their work at the Bonham Opera House in Clay Center, Kansas, that year. On April 21, 1887, “The Times” of Clay Center reported, “The scenery was painted by Sosman & Landis, of Chicago. The same firm that fitted the Gillis Opera House, Kansas City, and the Grand at Topeka. Mr. Hagan is their western machinist, and also does the same work for L. L. Graham of Kansas City.”
There were three main scenic studios in the Midwest by the turn of the twentieth century – the Twin Cities Scenic Co. (Minnesota), Sosman & Landis (Illinois), and The Kansas City Scenic Co. (Missouri). The three formed a triumvirate with agreed jurisdictions, allowing each to quickly dominate a region. They frequently shared artists and subcontracted projects to one another Sosman & Landis also established a regional office in New York by 1887. Scenic art relationships established a network of studios and their affiliates, preventing smaller firms and outsiders to get a foothold in the region during the late-nineteenth century and early-twentieth century. A network of affiliates allowed studios to offer services and products at a rate that few single competitors could match. In 1887, Graham was again listed as a scenic artist in the Kansas City Directory. Graham’s studio was listed 525 Main, with Graham rooming at 517 E. Missouri Ave. by 1888, Moses visited Graham in Kansas City, writing, “He was doing well.” Indeed, Graham was doing very well and maintaining close connections with Sosman & Landis in Chicago.
The 1888 Kansas City Directory included a few of Graham’s employees, artists associated with the firm of “Lemuel L. Graham.” Benjamin F. Dunn was listed as a scenic artist, employed by Graham that year. Graham’s business was thriving. His studio was included in the 1888 publication, “Industries of Kansas City: Historical, Descriptive, and Statistical.”Here is Graham’s listing:“L. L. Graham. Scenic Artist, Contractor for Stage Equipment, Theatre Hardware,Frame Work, Canvas, Traps, Bridges and Every Necessary Equipment of First Class Theatres, 525 & 527 Main Street.Mr. L. L. Graham is a prominent representative of the scenic art in Kansas City, having established this business here four years ago in conjunction with Mr. Davis, who withdrew from the firm some two years since. Mr. Graham is an adept in this line, having followed the business upwards of twenty-five years. His first experience in the school of art was had at McVicker’s’ Theater, Chicago, Ill. and subsequent training in San Francisco, Cleveland, Memphis and New Orleans. His establishment here is eligibly located at 525-527 Main Street, and consists of a studio and shops fitted up with every essential appliance and convenience for the correct and expeditious execution of the work, which comprises high art stage scenery and equipment, rich and elegant stage curtains, stage properties of every description, theatrical hardware, framework, canvas, traps, bridges, etc. One special feature of Mr. Graham’s industry is his advertising drop curtain, which is richly draped on the top and sides with royal crimson and heavy bullion fringes and pendants gracefully falling on steps painted at bottom of curtain. In the center is a large and artistically painted picture in stucco frame, which is surrounded by a border of deep Prussian blue, divided into spaces for the insertion of business cards. The cards may be lettered in a becoming and artistic style in bright gold, the whole having a brilliant and pleasing effect. There are usually from eighteen to twenty of these spaces of varying sizes to suit the advertiser as to the amount he desires to pay. Full particulars concerning this feature will be furnished by mail, upon application, to theatre managers, hall proprietors and others interested as well as any other information appertaining to stage equipment and carpentry. Mr. Graham has executed stage work for some fifty or sixty houses in Nebraska, notably at Omaha and Lincoln, etc., and for forty-five different houses in Kansas, including Winfield, Wichita and Anthony, and in St. Joe, Hannibal, Springfield and many others in Missouri. As many as thirty-six men in his employ upon an average weekly pay roll of $500.00, Mr. Graham giving his personal attention to every detail of this most intricate work. Contracts were made for Priests of Pallas and trades displays and pageants in Kansas.”
Thirty-six men in Graham’s scenic studio is comparable to that of Sosman & Landis in Chicago at the same time. However, Graham did not remain in Kansas, heading east.“Industries of Kansas City: Historical, Descriptive, and Statistical” also included an interesting comment about scenic studios during this period, noting “Such industries as the one under special notice [L. L. Graham], are among the necessary concomitants of a rapidly developing metropolitan community, indicating that spirit of enterprise that caters to refined taste and social enjoyment.” In other words, a town transitions into a metropolitan area when it can support not only a theatre, but also theatrical manufacturers. This says a lot about the size and scope of scenic concerns in the 1880s, as well as their reflection on the performing arts. Graham soon moved east and partnered with L. J. Couch (1838 – 1909) by 1896. Little is known of their partnership, but it ended badly. On January 9, 1896, Graham and Couch were listed in the Boston Globe under the heading “Business Troubles.” Of their failing scenic studio, the newspaper announced, “L. J. Couch and Lemuel L. Graham, doing business at 384 West 1st St, South Boston, under the firm of Levi Couch & Co., scenic painters, have been petitioned into insolvency by Edmund G. Pond, creditor.” Before Graham, L. J. Couch & Co. was operated by Couch and David Richards. Richards remained with the firm from 1893 to 1895. Graham was likely Richard’s replacement near the end. As with Graham’s firm in Kansas City, L. J. Couch & Co. offered a wide range of theatrical goods, ranging from painted scenery and theatrical hardware, to general stage appliances.
After L. J. Couch & Company was dissolved, Graham partnered with P. Dodd Ackerman, another well-known scenic artist and designer who made quite a name for himself. Graham and Ackerman’s studio was initially located in Brooklyn’s Broadway Theater. On August 13, 1902, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported that Graham and P. D. Ackerman took a mortgage with John C. Sceneck at Bushwick Ave. for $3900.” Their new address was now 1576-1580 Bushwick Ave. Unfortunately for Graham, this partnership also failed. In the end, Graham partnered with his son Revard and founded L. L. Graham and Son, also known as Graham & Son. Their firm was located at Crosby Avenue in Brooklyn, New York. Graham remained in Brooklyn, New York, until his passing in 1914.
There remains one extant drop credited to L. L. Graham & Son. It is located at the Grange Hall in Denmark, Maine.Graham passed away after a brief illness on Sunday, December 27, 1914. He was only 68 years old when he died at his home.
On December 29, 1914, the Brooklyn Daily Times published Graham’s obituary: Lemuel Laken Graham, died Sunday from heart failure after a long illness at his home. 3 Miller avenue, on the border line of Queens Borough, near Highland Park. Mr. Graham had a studio building on Crosby avenue, near his home, for ten years, funeral services will be held to-night with internment in Evergreens cemetery. Mr. Graham was known from coast to coast among theatrical men and had traveled in every State in the Union in his time. His work was known in most of the principal cities. He was born in Ann Harbor, Mich., July 4, sixty-eight years ago, the son of the Rev. Daniel McBride Graham, a Baptiste [sic.] clergyman and the president of Hillsdale College, Mich., and Ursula Graham. His father apprenticed him to the scene painting business in his youth and he early achieved fame in his chose calling. He was associated with Sosman and Landis of Chicago, for some years and painted the curtain for the Chicago Auditorium. Later he was a partner of L. J. Couch, of Boston, and in his studio, there turned out some of the best known to stageland. While at Kansas City for a number of years, Mr. Graham was in charge of the great annual event there, the priest of Pallas parade, and created all of the floats and scenes used in the carnival. Mr. Graham and P. Dodd Ackerman did the decorations for the Broadway Theatre here, and he painted several curtains and numerous elaborate settings for Manhattan theatres. Mr. Graham taught scene painting for years and some of the most skillful scenic artists in the country were his pupils. Of late years he confined his work to the creation of smaller scenes and he had a reputation for clever organizations. He leaves his wife, Elizabeth West Graham; a son Revard Parker Graham, a scenic artist, and a daughter, Mrs. Fermin Ferrer, of Laurelton, L. I.”LikeCommentShare