Edward Ludwig Albert Pausch was a Danish-American sculptor noted for his war memorials.
Life
He was born in Copenhagen, Denmark, the son of Henry and Annette P. Pausch. The family emigrated to Hartford, Connecticut when he was a child. He apprenticed for eleven years under Carl Conrads in Hartford, beginning at age 14. He worked as an assistant to Domingo Mora in New York City for six years, and with Karl Gerhardt in Hartford for three years. In 1889, he joined sculptor J. G. Hamilton at the Smith Granite Company in Westerly, Rhode Island. Pausch's most ambitious work, created while at Smith Granite Company, is the George Washington Memorial in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. A one-and-one-half-lifesize equestrian statue carved from granite, it depicts Washington as a 23-year-old colonel in the French and Indian War. He modeled the head on Houdon's bust. Smith Granite Company created at least fifty-seven monuments for the Gettysburg Battlefield, and at least sixteen monuments for Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park. —seven of these have been documented to Pausch. Van Amringe Granite Company created six monuments for the Antietam Battlefield—all documented to Pausch. Pausch opened his own studio in Hartford in 1900. Within hours of President William McKinley's assassination on September 14, 1901, he was summoned from Hartford to Buffalo, New York to make the death mask. He made a plaster cast the following morning, and completed the mask in about a month. He later used it to model a bust of the late president for the PhiladelphiaMain Post Office, and his McKinley statue in Reading, Pennsylvania. Pausch settled permanently in Buffalo, opening a studio at Delaware & Delavan Avenues. Among his students were sculptors Robert D. Barr, Stanley Edwards, and William Stephenson. He exhibited at the Albright Art Gallery in 1919. Pausch married Julia Ellenberger of Hartford in 1878. The spelling of his first name alternates between "Edward" and "Eduard."
Black Aggie
His most infamous work, Black Aggie, is an unauthorized near-copy of Augustus Saint-Gaudens's 1891 Adams Memorial. General Felix Agnus was led to believe that he was ordering a cast from Saint-Gaudens's original molds for the Angus family plot in Druid Ridge Cemetery, Pikesville, Maryland. John Salter, a granite supplier in Connecticut, misled Agnus and hired Pausch to model the freehand bronze copy. Saint-Gaudens's widow sued Salter, and won a court judgment. Pausch's actions were publicly denounced by sculptors such as Karl Bitter and Daniel Chester French, which dealt a serious blow to his professional reputation. The bootleg statue remained in the cemetery, and became the subject of ghost stories and urban legends. Following repeated acts of vandalism, it was removed and donated to the Smithsonian Institution in 1967. Deaccessioned, it is now installed in the courtyard between the Cutts-Madison House and the National Courts Building in Washington, D.C.
Selected works
Equestrian Statue of George Washington, George Washington Memorial, Allegheny Commons Park, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Broadway Civil War Monument, Broadway Triangle, 318 Elm Street, New Haven, Connecticut. Pausch modeled the Artilleryman figure; Stanley Edwards modeled the Infantryman figure.
3rd Maryland Infantry & Latrobe's Battery Monument, Orchard Knob. The monument's base originally featured two soldier figures, one Union and one Confederate, but these were removed following repeated vandalism.