05/23/2026
In the summer of 1848, the poets Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning traveled to Fano, Italy on vacation. Upon entering the Church of San Agostino, they discovered a large painting called the Guardian Angel by a seventeenth-century Italian artist known as Guercino. Robert Browning was inspired by the painting and composed a poem entitled, “The Guardian Angel: A Picture at Fano.”
William Phelps, a Robert Browning scholar, traveled to Fano the spring of 1912 and decided to institute the Fano Club to encourage Browning enthusiasts to visit the Italian city. Anyone could become a member of the club by visiting Fano, seeing the painting, and sending Phelps a postcard postmarked from Fano. He and his wife bought 75 postcards and addressed them to various friends in America. Unfortunately, the postcards never reached their destinations as they were among the mail cargo on board the RMS Titanic.
Learn more about the Fano Club and the Armstrong Browning Library & Museum in our exhibit White Star Lines: Titanic Connections at the Armstrong Browning Library. This exhibit is on display next to Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition. Both exhibits leave January 6, 2019.