Above is a tintype portrait of
Ferdinand V. Seibert as a young man. Mr. Seibert was born in Sandusky, Ohio on
February 20, 1861, to Valentine and Margaret (Ulrich) Seibert. This cabinet
card of Ferdinand V. Seibert was created by photographer W.A. Bishop in the
1880s.
Ferdinand was well known as a sign
painter and interior decorator. In the 1890s and early 1900s, Ferdinand V.
Seibert was in business with a Mr. Hasselbach. Hasselbach & Seibert were
awarded the contract for painting rooms at Sycamore School in 1894. When
Hasselbach & Seibert did the decorating work for attorneys King &
Guerin in 1901, the January 11, 1901 issue of the Sandusky Star reported that the work done by them was “as fine as
any ever done in Sandusky.” Later, Ferdinand V. Seibert worked alone. In 1912
he created fifty-six life size oil paintings of bathing beauties for a local
resort. Mr. Seibert did art work on the face of Frank Steinle’s “Wonder Clock,” now on display at Cedar
Point’s Town Hall Museum. Ferdinand V. Seibert died on November 17, 1930, after
a lengthy illness. His obituary, which appeared in the Sandusky Register of November 18, 1930, stated that he had been an
expert sign painter, and a lifelong resident of the city. Mr. Seibert was
survived by three sons. He was buried next to his wife, the former Mary
Schumacher, at Oakland Cemetery. The
bracelet pictured below was crafted by Ferdinand V. Seibert from walnut shells.
It can be seen at the Follett House Museum.
It would be great to know what happened to the Bathing Beauties - I believe he was also a traditional artist (I've seen a painting he did of a castle.)
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