Thursday, April 23, 2015

James McAllister

Mr. McAllister was yet another New Zealand photographer.

 At Ngamotu Beach, New Plymouth, ca. 1910
  
 Bushmen's camp, 1901
  
 Group on a grass tennis court in front of a house, probably in Stratford, ca. 1900
  
 Group taking a break during oat harvesting, 1914
  
McAllister family on a horse drawn wagon, 1910s

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Russell Lee

 Children of Negroes dressed in Sunday best for ceremonies, memorial services. 
All Saint's Day, New Roads, Louisiana, November 1938
  
 Mrs. Erasty Emvich in her kitchen. Mrs. Emvich is the wife of a tenant farmer and mother of twelve children, eleven of them living. Near Battle Ground, Indiana, March 1937
  
 Mrs. Ray Allen and two of her children in their home 
near Black River Falls, Wisconsin, June 1937
  
 One of Erasty Emvich's sons weaving a rug in farmhouse near Battle Ground, Indiana. Mr. Emvich, tenant farmer and father of twelve children, also weaves in his spare time, March 1937
  
 Prizewinning stallion bought with Farm Services Administration loan to 
serve cooperative group in Cherokee County, Oklahoma, Summer 1939
  
 Railroad workers, Port Barre, Louisiana, October 1938
  
 Some of the residents of the transient camp operated by the state of Michigan at Hagerman Lake. About a hundred men are quartered here, mostly old lumberjacks, miners, and other unemployables. Some of these men stay for just a short time. When men come to camp they are usually undernourished. April-May 1937
 
Washday at the FSA (Farm Security Administration) 
Camelback Farms, Phoenix, Arizona, February-March 1942

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Ann Rosener

 I'll carry mine. Delivery vans, 1942 style, line up outside a Greenbelt, Maryland, grocery store awaiting customers. Tire scarcity and gasoline rationing have placed such service at a premium, and these youngsters who are using their express wagons to carry home Mrs. America's purchases are doing their country a real service. November 1942
  
 I'll carry mine. Junior should wipe that worried frown off his face, for he's doing his Uncle Sam a favor by sharing the carriage with his mother's purchases, November 1942
  
 I'll carry mine. There's nothing like a husky and willing escort to simplify a shopping expedition, now that deliveries of goods have been curtailed to conserve tires and gasoline, December 1942
  
 In the war against waste, American housewives are learning the basic steps of wise buying - buy by weight, not by number; buy in quantity, February 1942
  
 That washing machine has to last for a long time, so keep it in good 
condition. Drain it immediately after use, rinse tub thoroughly, 
remove agitator or suction cups and rinse with clear water. February 1942
 
 There's no June in January for the housewife with economy and Victory on her mind. Buying foods out of season means less food for more money, and less money available for household staples and defense stamps. February 1942
 
 Wartime food demonstration. With wartime food shortages creating many nutritional problems for housewives, Ida Lansden, home economist, explains the necessity of preserving the vitamin content of available foods to war workers' wives in an Alexandria, Virginia housing settlement. March 1943
 
Women in war. Supercharger plant workers. A good day's work done, employees of a large Midwest supercharger plant line up to punch their timecards. With women comprising 80 percent of its workers, its nothing unusual to find an all-female contingent like this one at the plant. Allis Manufacture Company. October 1942

Monday, April 20, 2015

Edgar Richard Williams

Edgar Richard Williams was a New Zealand photographer. Most of the photos in his collection were taken by his father, William Williams.

 Bull, sledge, boys and dog at Surat Beach, 1895-1900
  
 Edgar and Owen Williams and Edith Kenworth inspect a Nikau palm flower bud, 1901
  
 Group of children, Motohou, near Wanganui, 1903
  
 Group of women at Waiwhetu Pa, ca. 1880s
  
Lydia Myrtle Williams, reclining in a hammock with a book and a fan, 
in the garden of the house in Carlyle Street, Napier, ca. 1889
 
Courtesy Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Marion Post Wolcott

 Negro sharecropper and two wagehands shucking corn for the landlord, a white woman. On road to Cedar Grove, west of highway No. 14, Orange County, North Carolina, September 1939
  
 Playing checkers with bottle caps along highway between 
Charleston and Gauley Bridge, West Virginia, September 1938
  
 Political poster on sharecropper's house, Mississippi Delta, Mississippi, October 1939
  
 Project family picking peas in their garden, Flint River Farms, Georgia, Spring 1939
  
Rolling store which goes from door to door selling groceries, hardware, drygoods, drugs, and a variety of household and farm supplies. Near Montezuma, Georgia, May 1939

Saturday, April 18, 2015

Louis Edward Nollau

 Women making formations on gymnasium floor
  
 Cooking class, 1941
  
 Group picture of women (cadets?)
  
 Student demonstration, angel food cake, Campbell County, 1934
  
Three women doing headstands

Friday, April 17, 2015

Charles Bayliss

Charles Bayliss was a 19th century Australian photographer. These photos all date to 1886.

 "Flooded out!", a homestead lease on Toorale Station, Darling River, New South Wales
  
 Bullock teams at Wilcannia, Darling River, New South Wales
  
 Group of Aboriginals at Chowilla Station on the lower Murray River, South Australia
  
 Group of Aboriginals at Dunlop Station homestead, Darling River, New South Wales
  
 Junction of Darling and Murray Rivers, taken from Victorian side
  
 Lake Woytchugga near Wilcannia, Darling River, New South Wales
  
On Culpaulin Station on the Darling River, New South Wales