Who he was
Isaac Scott Hathaway was born in Lexington, Kentucky, on April 4, 1872, the son of a minister. The story he told about his calling is a good one: as a child, visiting a museum, he went looking for a bust of Frederick Douglass and found that none existed. He resolved to change that — and spent the rest of his life making the likenesses of Black Americans that the country had failed to make.
He trained widely and seriously. After Chandler Junior College in Lexington he studied at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, then took formal ceramics training at the Cincinnati Art Academy and other ceramics schools. That last skill mattered: Hathaway became one of the first people in the United States to teach ceramics at the college level, building and chairing ceramics departments at Branch Normal College in Pine Bluff, Arkansas (today the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff), at Tuskegee Institute, and later at Alabama State College in Montgomery.
By the time the U.S. Mint came calling, Hathaway had already made his name. He sculpted more than 100 busts and masks of prominent African Americans — Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, George Washington Carver, Carter G. Woodson, Bishop Richard Allen, and others. His foot-tall busts became fixtures in Black households across the South. He worked often from life and death masks, which is exactly how he would later build the portrait that ended up in millions of pockets.