Monday, June 6, 2016

Augustus Sherman

Augustus Frederick Sherman worked as a clerk at Ellis Island in the years 1892-1925. He was an untrained, yet highly gifted photographer who created hundreds of images documenting the new arrivals to America. Fascinated by the diverse origins and cultural backgrounds of his subjects, Sherman created a riveting series of portraits, offering viewers a compelling perspective on this dynamic period in American history.

Sherman took photographs from about 1904 until 1924. Considering the state of the art of photography in that era, with long exposures and huge box cameras, the fact he was able to capture so many images during his working life is amazing.

Sherman took photographs of families, groups, and individuals who were being detained either for medical reasons or for further interrogation. In some cases, such as his images of a gypsy family, the subjects of photographs were deported. Over the course of his career at Ellis Island, Sherman took more than 200 pictures, often encouraging his subjects to open their suitcases and put on their elaborate national costumes or folk dress. He captured images of Romanian shepherds, German stowaways, circus performers and women from Guadeloupe.

Sherman's photographs were not taken in an official capacity, but they were used by immigration officials to promote the work of Ellis Island. They were published in some of the annual reports of the Commissioner General of Immigration and provided by Ellis Island Commissioner William Williams to the New York Times to promote William's work at Ellis Island. Sherman's photograph collections are housed at the Ellis Island Immigration Museum and the New York Public Library.

 A Bavarian man
  
 A Danish man
  
 A German stowaway
  
 A Greek soldier
  
 A Guadeloupean woman
  
 Three women from Guadeloupe
  
 A Hindu boy
  
 A man from the Russian empire
  
 Men from the Russian empire

Sunday, June 5, 2016

Saturday, June 4, 2016

Detroit Publishing

Casino, Riverton Park, Portland, Maine, 1900-06
  
Driving from ninth tee, Mount Pleasant golf links, 1900-05
  
 Hans Behm: Seeing Chicago, auto at Monroe near State, Chicago, Illinois, 1900-15
  
Midwinter carnival, storming the fortress, Upper Saranac Lake, NY, 1909
  
Russian boat crews being towed to races, Columbian Naval Parade, April 1893

Friday, June 3, 2016

1927 Flood

The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 was the most destructive river flood in the history of the United States. It turned out also to be a major impetus for the Great Migration of southern African Americans to the north. The flood inundated roughly 27,000 square miles of land and displaced some 700,000 persons. Property damage was estimated at $400 million, and 246 people died in the flood waters. Particularly hard hit by the disaster was the Mississippi Delta region.

 African-American flood refugees stand in line at Birdsong Camp, 
Cleveland, Mississippi, April 29, 1927
  
 Birdsong Camp at Cleveland, Mississippi, April 29, 1927. 
Flood refugees sitting at tables eating.
  
 Greenville, Mississippi, April 30, 1927
  
 Greenville, Mississippi, April 30, 1927
  
Leland, Mississippi, May 1, 1927
 

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Kids

From the Library of Congress Stereograph Collection.

 "Now smile a little dolly, while I take your picture", 1902
  
 Children are children the wide world round--little folks 
playing Hop Scotch in Cashmere [Kashmir], India, 1903
  
 I'd rather sleep then eat, 1905
  
 I've found them, 1904
  
 In the daisy field, 1903
  
Patchwork, 1903

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Pitcairn

Pitcairn, Pennsylvania, May 1943. Before the "Rust Belt" became the Rust Belt, it looked like this.  Photos by Marjorie Collins.

 Lunch hour in the women's locker at the yards of the Pennsylvania Railroad
  
 Miss Helen Gusmerotti, twenty-nine, employed at the Pennsylvania Railroad 
as a car repairmen's helper, earning seventy-two cents per hour
  
 Miss Mary DaVanzo, twenty-two, employed at the Pennsylvania Railroad steel car 
shop boiler room as a stationary firemen's helper, earning seventy-two cents an hour
  
 Mrs. Agnes Glunt, mother of a child four years old, employed as a 
rivet heater in the Pitcairn, Pennsylvania Railroad steel car shop
  
 Mrs. Bernice Stevens of Braddock, Pennsylvania, mother of one child, employed 
in the engine house of the Pennsylvania Railroad, earns fifty-eight cents an hour
[notice the difference?]
  
 Twins Amy and Mary Rose Lindich, twenty-one, employed at the Pennsylvania 
Railroad as car repairmen helpers, earning seventy-two cents per hour
  
Mrs. Julia Sabo, thirty-five, mother of three children, employed as a machinist's helper 
in the Pennsylvania Railroad yards, earning seventy-two cents an hour

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Vintage Deseronto

Deseronto is a town in Ontario, Canada, on the shore of Lake Ontario.

 At 12 O'Clock Park, ca. 1910
  
 Crew members of the Rapids King, June 1921
Crew members of the Rapids King, a steamship operated by the Richelieu and Ontario Navigation Company (Canada Steamship Lines after 1913). The middle decks of the ship are visible in the background. The photograph was taken by the photographic firm of Black and Bennett, 85 Bleury Street, Montreal. The Rapids King was built in Toronto in 1907 and was retired from service in 1931.

An article in the New York Times of 18 July 1921 describes the crew's rescue of passengers of this ship on the previous day, after its rudder chain was broken in the Long Sault Rapids en route from Prescott, Ontario, to Montreal, Quebec. It is possible that this picture was taken after this event. 
 Deseronto Hockey Team, 1911
  
 Group portrait of a "Citizens' Band", ca. 1900
  
 Metcalf Foods Ltd., Deseronto, ca. 1938
  
 Staff of Shannonville Canning Ltd., Shannonville, Ontario, in September 1938
  
Students and staff of Deseronto High School, 1927-1928