"Trail of Tears"

  • Details

    Western, Indian, Cowboy, Trail, Old West, Native American

  • Biography

    Edward Fraughton Born 1939

    From Utah, Edward Fraughton is a sculptor in stone and bronze of western and history subjects, many of them commemorative and in public locations. Some of his major works include the Mormon Battalion Monument, Sons of Utah Pioneers at the Presidio Park in Old Town San Diego; the All is Well Family Monument in the Brigham Young Cemetery in Salt Lake City; and the Spirit of Wyoming monument on the grounds of the state capitol building in Cheyenne, Wyoming. A major interest is cowboys and horses, especially cowboys on running horses. Fraughton once said: "The cowboy comes closest to being a Greek centaur, man and horse working together almost as one body." (Hagerty 112)

    Fraughton was born in Salt Lake City and earned a BFA degree in 1962 from the University of Utah where his art teachers were Avard Fairbanks and Justin Fairbanks, with whom he studied four years. In 1968, the Mormon Battalion Monument was his first major commission.

    As a ten-year old youngster, he was tickled when he received first place for crayon art in a fourth-grade competition whose theme was "America the Beautiful", sponsored by the Milton Bradley Company.

    Fraughton is a member of the National Sculpture Society, a founding member of the National Academy of Western Art, and a 1973 and 1975 gold medal winner at the National Cowboy Hall of Fame. He has exhibited his sculpture at the Gilcrease Museum and the Northwest Rendezvous Group.


    Sources include:
    Donald Hagerty, Leading the West, pp. 111-112
    R.R. Bowker, Who's Who in American Art, 1993-1994