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AUGUR, Hezekiah, sculptor, born in New Haven, Connecticut, 21 February 1791 ; died there, 10 January 1858. He was unsuccessful in business, and turned his attention to sculpture and mechanical inventions. He was almost wholly self-taught, but was possessed of considerable native talent. His best work, "Jephtha and his Daughter," is in the Trumbull gallery, Yale College. His most important invention was a machine for carving wood, which came into general use. He was given the degree of A. M. by Yale in 1833, though he was not a graduate.
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