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・ Philip Rashleigh (1689–1736)
・ Philip Rashleigh (1729–1811)
・ Philip Rasmussen
・ Philip Rastelli
・ Philip Ravenhill
・ Philip Ray
・ Philip Ray (cricketer)
・ Philip Ray Martinez
・ Philip Rea, 2nd Baron Rea
・ Philip Reading Tannery
・ Philip Reed
・ Philip Reed (game designer)
・ Philip Rees
・ Philip Reese Uhler
・ Philip Reeve
Philip Reid
・ Philip Reid (sportswriter)
・ Philip Reilly
・ Philip Reinagle
・ Philip Reis
・ Philip Remler
・ Philip Repyngdon
・ Philip Rhoden
・ Philip Rhodes
・ Philip Richard Fendall I
・ Philip Richard Fendall II
・ Philip Richard Morris
・ Philip Richardson
・ Philip Ridder
・ Philip Ridley


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Philip Reid : ウィキペディア英語版
Philip Reid
:''For similarly named individuals, see Phil Reid (disambiguation).''
Philip Reid (''c.'' 1820 — February 6, 1892) was an African American master craftsman and artisan who played a key role as the foreman in the casting of the Statue of Freedom sculpture atop the United States Capitol building in Washington D.C.〔Architect of the Capitol, "Philip Reid and the Statue of Freedom." Last modified June 2013. Accessed August 29, 2013. http://www.aoc.gov/philip-reid-and-statue-freedom.〕 He was born into slavery in South Carolina's historic city of Charleston.
== Reid and the Statue of Freedom ==

Commissioned in 1855, the initial full-size plaster model of Freedom was completed by American sculptor Thomas Crawford in his studio in Rome, Italy, but he died suddenly in 1857 before it left his studio. Shipped by his widow, packed into six crates, it finally arrived in Washington in late March 1859 and was then assembled and put on display in the Old Hall of the House, now National Statuary Hall.〔
In May 1860, self-taught sculptor Clark Mills was awarded the contract by the Secretary of War to cast Freedom at his foundry off Bladensburg Road, just inside the District of Columbia. In June 1860, casting of the statue began. The first step was to disassemble the plaster model for the statue into its five main sections in order to move it from the Capitol to the foundry.〔 After its arrival at the Capitol an Italian sculptor, according to Mills' son Fisk, was hired to assemble it. However, when the time came to separate the sections, the Italian sculptor refused to help unless given a pay raise. Fortunately, Philip Reid figured out that using a pulley and tackle to pull up on the lifting ring at the top of the model would reveal the joints between the sections. The statue was successfully separated into its five sections and transported to Mills' Foundry.〔Wyeth, S. D. The Federal City: The Ins and Abouts of Washington. Washington D.C.: Gibson Brothers, 1865. 194-195.〕
The government rented Mills’s foundry for $400 a month and supplied the materials, fuel and labor to cast the statue. Because of this arrangement, the names of the craftsmen and laborers were recorded each day in Mills’ monthly report. Philip Reid was listed as a “laborer” and was paid $1.25 a day, while other laborers were paid $1 day. There is no evidence that any of other men listed as laborers were black or enslaved. An enslaved worker was paid directly if he worked on Sunday; his owner received the payment for his work the other six days. Only Philip Reid was paid directly by the government for working on 33 Sundays.〔
On April 16, 1862, President Abraham Lincoln signed an act abolishing involuntary servitude in the District of Columbia, and district slave owners were allowed to petition for compensation. Clark Mills petitioned for compensation for eleven slaves, including Philip Reid, and included a description of Reid in the petition. Mills wrote that Reid was “aged 42 years, mullatto () color, short in statue, in good health, not prepossessing in appearance but smart in mind, a good workman in a foundry…”〔 Mills asked $1500 for Reid, but received only $350.40.〔“List of Petitions.” House of Representatives Executive Document No. 42. 38th Congress 1st Session, February 16, 1864.〕 It is not known if Reid witnessed the assembly of the Statue of Freedom atop the Capitol Dome, but he was a free man when the last piece was put into place in December 1863. Two years later, in 1865, author S.D. Wyeth wrote in ''The Federal City'', “Mr. Reed (his name was spelled during the rest of his life ),〔Smolenyak, Megan S. Ancestry Magazine, "Philip Reid, the Slave Who Rescued Freedom." May/June 2009. Accessed April 16, 2014. http://books.google.com/books?id=u1i7lhKvCpwC&pg=PA54#v=onepage&q&f=false.〕 the former slave, is now in business for himself, and highly esteemed by all who know him.”〔 Afterwards he was listed as "Philip Reed" in city directories and census records as a “plasterer.” In 1870 he was listed along with a wife, Jane, whom he had married in June 1862, and a two-year-old son.〔〔Ancestry Library, "1870 Census: Philip Reed." Accessed April 15, 2013. http://search.ancestrylibrary.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?h=3010717&db=1870usfedcen&indiv=try.〕 In 1880 his wife was listed as Mary P., a laundress.〔〔Ancestry Library, "1880 Census: Philip Reed." Accessed April 15, 2013. http://search.ancestrylibrary.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?h=26938481&db=1880usfedcen&indiv=try.〕

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