Most of all, however, Henry loved art. In 1913, while a senior at MIT, he agreed to draw the poster for the school's annual Tech Show, a vaudeville-style production of song and dance. See thumbnail left. In later life, he was one of the founders of the Abington Art Association, its president for three years, executive committee member, and secretary. He was also a member of the Brockton Art Center, now known as the
Fuller Craft Museum, and for many years a member of the
Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Over his life, he exhibited in many art shows which included Abington, Norwell, Duxbury, Weymouth, Braintree, Scituate, Cohasset and Concord Art Associations, State Federation of Women's Clubs and Visual Art Club of Bridgewater State College. He had one-man shows at the Universalist-Unitarian Church in Brockton, Oyster Harbor Club, Osterville, North Quincy Public Library, Utica Mutual Insurance Company, IBM Building, Waltham, and Milton Hill House, Milton. In 1963 his watercolor "Rocky Coast" received the highest popular vote in this class at the annual Jordan Marsh Exhibition by New England artists, winning the Richard Mitton Gold Medal Award. ==Notes and references==