Clarissa Munger Badger

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Born
Clarissa Munger

1806 (1806)
East Guilford, Connecticut
Died1889 (aged 8283)
Resting placeWest Cemetery, Madison, Connecticut
Knownforbotanical painting
Clarissa Munger Badger
portrait by Nathaniel Jocelyn
Born
Clarissa Munger

1806 (1806)
East Guilford, Connecticut
Died1889 (aged 8283)
Resting placeWest Cemetery, Madison, Connecticut
Known forbotanical painting
SpouseMilton Badger

Clarissa Munger Badger (20 May 1806 – 14 December 1889)[1] was a mid 19th century American botanical illustrator best known for three volumes of flower paintings accompanied by poetry. She also painted on textiles.

Clarissa Munger Badger, lithograph of tulips from her 1867 book Floral Belles from the Green-House and Garden.

Clarissa W. Munger was born in East Guilford, Connecticut, in 1806 to George Munger, a portrait painter and engraver, and Parnel Kelsey Munger.[2][3] Clarissa, her older brother George, and her younger sister Caroline all become artists as well, with Caroline specializing in portraits like her father and Clarissa in botanical art.[4][5]

In 1828, she married the Rev. Milton Badger, pastor of the South Church in Andover, Massachusetts and later the associate secretary of the American Home Missionary Society, a job requiring him to spend time in the western United States.[6][7] They had five children, of whom two survived to adulthood, both becoming doctors.[6] Milton developed Bright's disease, and the couple moved back Madison, Connecticut, where Clarissa was widowed in 1873.[7]

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