Taft Museum of Art. The Taft Museum of Art is a historic house museum holding a fine art collection in Cincinnati.
   It is on the National Register of Historic Places listings in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio and is a contributing property to the Lytle Park Historic District. The Taft house was first built for Martin Baum and then was the residence of Nicholas Longworth.
   David Sinton lived in the house with his daughter Anna, who married Charles Phelps Taft, the half-brother of President William Howard Taft. The Tafts lived in the house from 1873 until 1929.
   William H. Taft accepted his presidential nomination there from its portico in 1908. The Tafts were avid art collectors.
   They turned their home into a museum, and donated their Greek Revival house and the collection of art that filled it to the people of Cincinnati in 1927. In the Tafts' deed of gift they stated, We desire to devote our collection of pictures, porcelains, and other works of art to the people of Cincinnati in such a manner that they may be readily available for all. The Taft Museum opened to the public on November 29, 1932. The building was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1976, in honor of the murals on its walls that were painted by Robert S. Duncanson, one of the first widely known African-American landscape painters, on commission from Nicholas Longworth. The museum's collections include European old master paintings, w
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