DAINGERFIELD, ELLIOTT , American painter, was born at Harper's Ferry, Va. (now W. Va.), March 26, 1859. He received his early education at Fayetteville, N.C., and went to New York city in 188o to study art. He exhibited first at the National Academy of Design in 1880. Among his best known pictures are "Christ Stilling the Tempest" and "Slumbering Fog," in the Metropolitan Museum, New York city; "Storm Breaking Up," in the Toledo Museum ; "The Child of Mary," in the National Gallery, Washington; "The Midnight Moon," in the Brooklyn Museum; "The Valley of the Dragon," in the Chicago Art Institute. He executed the beautiful mural decorations in the Lady Chapel of the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, New York city. He won the Clarke prize of the National Academy of Design, 1902. He was the author of monographs on George Inness (1911), and on R. A. Blakelock 0914). He died Oct. 22, 1932.