Friday, August 7, 2015

Tennis

More vintage tennis photos (previous set here).

 Gladys Roy and Ivan Unger play tennis while in mid-flight, 1925
[vintage X-Games]
  
 May Sutton Bundy, the first US player to win the 
Wimbledon ladies' singles title, pictured in action in 1907
  
 Men's singles match, Seattle, 1895
  
 South End Lawn Tennis Club, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, ca. 1900
  
 Tennis players having a smoke, ca. 1932
  
Three young women with tennis rackets
[anyone recognize the monogram on their hats?]

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Lafayette Studio

Two children in wheel chairs playing checkers, 1942
  
Two women in fur coats standing on steps (modeling), 1939
  
Two women leaning on the hood of a car, 1941
  
Two women playing in the snow, 1940
  
 
Two women walking down the sidewalk, 1941

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Ann Rosener

 Women in essential services. Ruth Anderson, San Francisco's only woman radio news reporter, has entered a field formerly open only to men. A graduate of radio soap operas, Miss Anderson began her newscasts last October on a probational basis and has been editing, preparing and broadcasting reports on world news ever since. February 1943
  
 Women in industry. Flare gun production. "What's new about women working in war industries?" asks Mrs. Annette Caines of Detroit, who manned a milling machine in a gun factory during the last war and hasn't stopped work since. Now employed by a Midwest vacuum cleaner plant which has been converted to war work, Mrs. Caines processes flare gun parts on a drill press with the vigor of an eager, youthful worker. With a thirty-two-year-old son in the Army, Mrs. Caines has a deep personel interest in her job. "We women want to fight with our men folks," she says. "Maybe we can't shoot guns, but we sure can make the stuff for them to shoot with." Eureka Vacuum, Detroit, Michigan. July 1942
  
 Women in war. Summer canning workers. Food to make America strong. Women near Rochelle, Illinois, many of them schoolteachers and pupils, work in asparagus canning factories during the summer months. September 1942
 
 Women in war. Supercharger plant workers. A former bank clerk and a college graduate who majored in physics, find war jobs in the shipping department of a large Midwest supercharger plant. Betty Hinz (left) whose husband is in the Army Air Corps, left a job in a Milwaukee bank to take a more active part in the war effort. October 1942
[note that the lettering on the left side of the box has 
been "redacted," no doubt a bit of wartime censorship]
 
Women in war. Supercharger plant workers. Plant foremen point to 20-year-old Annie Tabor as one of their best lathe operators, despite her lack of previous industrial experience. October 1942

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Jim Fitzpatrick

 Josephine Smith digging a grave at the Drouin Cemetery, Victoria, 1944
  
 Main Street, Drouin, Victoria, 1944
  
 Miss Jean Lilburne with her class in the Grade One room 
at Drouin State School, Drouin, Victoria, 1944
  
 Mrs Gleeson pours a beer for a customer at the Drouin Hotel, Drouin, Victoria, 1944
  
 On the way home from school, Drouin, Victoria, 1944
  
Red Cross members outside the Soldier's Memorial Hall, Drouin, Victoria, 1944

Monday, August 3, 2015

James McAllister

 Children at Empire Day celebrations, Stratford, 24 May 1903
  
 Four young women wearing large, ornate hats, 1908
  
 Group of children, Stratford district, ca. 1903
  
 Young boy in a dentist's waiting room, Taranaki Region, ca. 1910
[a study in gathering terror]
  
Young girls standing around a baby's coffin, ca. 1910s
[the two girls on the left appear to be having a real BFF moment]
 
Courtesy Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand

Sunday, August 2, 2015

Samuel Heath Head

 Children playing by and in a flooded river, possibly the Waikato, 1890s-1930s
  
 Clearing the bush for the North Island Main Trunk railway line, 1906
  
 Long tram turning the corner in front of the Bank of 
New Zealand, Cathedral Square, Christchurch, 1910s-30s
  
 Paddle steam boat, Whanganui River, ca. 1905
  
Studebaker sedan with family, 1922-28
 
Courtesy Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand

Saturday, August 1, 2015

Charles Marville

Charles Marville (born Charles François Bossu) was a French photographer, who mainly photographed architecture, landscapes and the urban environment. He used both paper and glass negatives. He is most well known for taking pictures of ancient Parisian quarters before they were destroyed and rebuilt under "Haussmannization", Baron Haussmann's new plan for modernization of Paris. In 1862, he was named official photographer of Paris. Marville's photos have in recent years been on display in numerous prominent galleries, including the National Art Gallery and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

 Self-portrait, 1861
  
 Avenue du Commandeur (de la rue d’Alésia) (Fourteenth Arrondissement)
  
 Banks of the Bièvre River at the Bottom of the 
rue des Gobelins (Fifth Arrondissement), ca. 1862
  
 Cathédrale de Moulins (Allier) en travaux, 1860
   
Cour Saint-Guillaume (Ninth Arrondissement), 1866-67