Who he was
Joseph Alexis Bailly was born in Paris around 1823, the son of a cabinetmaker, and trained at the École des Beaux-Arts — the most prestigious art school in France. Then the Revolution of 1848 swept him up. Drafted into the army, he struck an officer, deserted, and fled the country.
That flight became a career. He passed through England, the United States, and Argentina before settling in Philadelphia around 1850. He started where his father had left off — carving furniture and wood — and worked his way up to bronze portrait busts and full-size public statues.
By 1860 the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts had named him an Academician, its highest honor for an artist. His best-known work is the marble George Washington he completed in 1869, which stood — and in bronze replica still stands — outside Independence Hall, in the very city where the country was founded. A giant Benjamin Franklin (1868) and a Washington, D.C. statue of Civil War general John A. Rawlins followed. Bailly died in Philadelphia in 1883.