Louis R. Ehrich
Albany, New York, 1849 - 1911, London
type Dealer/Gallery Collector
dates 1849–1911
city New York
state NY
other cities Albany, NY; New Haven, CT; Berlin, Germany; Colorado Springs, CO;
history Louis Rinaldo Ehrich was an author, politician, business and railroad man as well as a collector and the president/founder of the Erhich Galleries in New York.
Ehrich's collection included work from all schools of art: Early English, Spanish, Italian, and Flemish.
Ehrich Dutch and Flemish collection included paintings by Gerard Dou, Frans Hals, Adrian van Ostade, Paul Potter, Rubens, and David Teniers, Philip Wouverman, Abraham Van Beyeren, Rembrandt, Baltasar Denner, Jacob van der Does, G. Van Herp, Jan Joseph Horemans, Saloman Koninck, Willem van Mierls, A. Moller, Peter Nason, Cranach, and Roger von der Weyden.
Ehrich sold work to museums and private collectors including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Worcester Museum, Boston Museum, the Chicago Art Institute, Henry E. Hundington, John G. Johnson, and Archer M. Huntington.
Ehrich was a member of the Yale Club, Metropolitan Museum of Art, and many historical societies.
decades 1870-1880
1880-1890
1890-1900
1900-1910
website
updated 12/01/2017 04:48
research links
Repository Description
Yale University Library Louis Rinaldo Ehrich papers, 1862-1911 (inclusive).
Colorado College Special Collections Colorado Springs Century Chest Collection, 1901.
http://research.frick.org/directoryweb/browserecord.php?-action=browse&-recid=7470 I.s. 12/12/2017
Louis Rinaldo Ehrich, son of Joseph and Rebecca (Sporborg) Ehrich, was born in Albany, N. Y., January 23, 1849. He was fitted for college in the Hopkins Grammar School, New Haven.
After graduation he traveled in Europe and studied in the University of Berlin a year, and was then a member of the dry goods firm of Ehrich Brothers in New York City until 1886. In August, 1878, he suffered a slight hemorrhage of the lungs, in consequence of which he spent a year in southern Europe. In the spring of 1880 his lungs were considered entirely healed, but the next fall he had several hemorrhages. He visited Aiken, S. C., and Europe, and from September, 1881, remained abroad for four years, spending the first three winters in Mentone, France, and the last in Davos, Switzerland. Soon after returning to New York in November, 1885, he found a climate suited to his health in Colorado, and from 1889 to 1905 made his home in Colorado Springs, where he was a leading citizen. He was vice-president of the Colorado Springs & Manitou Street Railway Co., the Manitou Mineral Water Co., and the Colorado City Land and Improvement Co., a director of the First National Bank, president of the Falcon Town and Land Co. and the Board of Trade of Colorado Springs, also of the Mozart Choral Society and the University Club of that city. He was a delegate to the Gold Democratic Convention in 1896, and was a national committeeman of his party. He was a member of the executive committee of the Anti-Imperialist League, and temporary chairman of the Third Party Convention in Indianapolis in 1900.
He published in 1892 a volume on "The Question of Silver," and wrote for The Arena of March, 1893, "A Religion for all Time," for The Forum of December, 1894, "Stock-Sharing as Preventive of Labor Troubles," besides other articles and addresses on economic and political questions. He was a delegate to the International Free Trade Congress in London in 1908, and in Antwerp in 1910, and was president of the American Free Trade League.
For many years he was a collector and dealer in old paintings, and in this capacity had earned a reputation for absolute honesty. As president of the Ehrich Galleries in New York City he made an annual tour to Europe in search of masterpieces of all schools. Many of those he gathered were of great value, and he had imported an especially large number of the works of the early Spanish masters. A collection of old Dutch paintings which he made was on exhibition in the galleries of the Yale School of the Fine Arts previous to its sale in 1894. In memory of the reunion of his class on its fortieth anniversary, he gave to the Art School a painting of the school of Paul Veronese.
As he was about to return from his annual tour Mr. Ehrich died suddenly of heart disease following an attack of asthma in London, England, October 23, 1911. He was 62 years of age.
He married in New York City, January 14, 1874, Henrietta, daugter of David and Caroline (August) Minzesheimer, who, with two sons and daughters, survives him. One son and one daughter are deceased. One of the sons graduated from the Sheffield Scientific School in 1899.
(Taken from Yale Obituary Record, 1912, pp. 230-232.)
http://drs.library.yale.edu/HLTransformer/HLTransServlet?stylename=yul.ead2002.xhtml.xsl&pid=mssa:ms.1349&clear-stylesheet-cache=yes I.S. 12/12/2017
Person TypeIndividual
Last Updated8/7/24
Colorado Springs, Colorado, 1890 - 1957, Big Sur, California
Stockbridge, Massachusetts, 1862 - 1929, Clifton Springs, New York
Buffalo, New York, 1876 - 1955, Buffalo, New York
Newport, Rhode Island, 1842 - 1901, Phoenix, Arizona
active East Aurora, New York, 1895 - 1915
near Treviso, about 1459 - 1517, Conegliano or Venice
Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, 1863 - 1938, New York, New York
New York, 1872 - 1930, Portland, Maine