Auguste Hervieu

Auguste Jean Jacques Hervieu (born c.1794; active 1819–1858) was a French painter and book illustrator, working in London.

He was exiled from France in 1823 for his anti-royalist politics in the time of Louis XVIII, and he moved to England.

[2] As a young man trying to make his living, he travelled to America in November 1827 with the writer Frances Trollope as her children's tutor: one of the children was the novelist Anthony Trollope.

[3] He made the illustrations for Frances Trollope's 1840 book A Summer in Brittany,[4] The Broad Arrow by Oliné Keese (1859)[5] and others.

[1] Surviving portraits include Frances Trollope, and probably Anthony or Henry Trollope as a child; the engineer James Watt; and the society cook Charles Elmé Francatelli.

Frances Trollope painted by Auguste Hervieu, c. 1832