Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Augustine H. Folsom

Augustine H. Folsom, also know professionally as A. H. Folsom, was a commercial photographer based in Roxbury, listed in the City Directory from 1879-1903 at 48 Alleghany St. He was also the owner of a carpet factory.

The Boston Public Library holds many of Folsom's photographs taken in the Roxbury neighborhood, as well as his photographs documenting the Boston Public School System from 1890-1893, some of which were exhibited at the 1900 Paris Expo.

 Appleton Street kindergarten, 1892-93
  
Everett School - interior - 3rd class, 2nd division, 1892-93
  
 Hyde School, kindergarten, 1892-93
  
 Primary school, class I, Prince District,1892
  
Winchell School, Wells primary, 3rd class, room 7, ca. 1890
 
Source: Boston Public Library

Monday, September 5, 2016

Abbot Academy

Abbot Academy (also known as Abbot Female Seminary) was an independent boarding preparatory school for women boarding and day students in grades 9 to 12 from 1828 to 1973. Located in Andover, Massachusetts, Abbot Academy was notable as one of the first incorporated secondary schools for educating young women in New England. It merged with Phillips Academy in 1973, and its campus continues to be used by the combined school. The photograph collection documents Abbot Academy's athletics, buildings, and people (trustees, faculty, staff, students, and alumnae) as well as student life.

Badminton, May 15, 1886
 
 Badminton
  
 Cosmopolitan group, February 1933
  
Cross-country skiing and snow shoeing, 1925
  
 Fall field day
  
Fall field day
 

Saturday, September 3, 2016

Henry Charles Wright

Three people and two dogs by the verandah of a house
  
 Unidentified Maori group, Captain William Shilling (back, kneeling) and the photographer's daughter, Amy Elizabeth Wright, photographed at Karaka Bay, 1889-90
  
Unidentified ship docked at a Wellington wharf, 1890-1910
  
 View of part of the rocky shoreline at Island Bay, Wellington. 
Amy Elizabeth Wright, the daughter of the photographer, 
is seated on the shore with a cocker spaniel 
and an unidentified dog in her lap, 1890s
  
Wharf, boat and group at Seatoun, circa 1890s. Shows two men, one in work clothes and the other in a suit with bowler hat. Amy Elizabeth Wright stands with a greyhound to the left.
 
Courtesy Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand

Friday, September 2, 2016

Charles C. Pierce Collection

Friday Morning Club entry in La Fiesta de Los Angeles, 1896
  
Los Angeles Fiesta. East from 5th from Hill. Business men as clowns, 1901
  
Los Angeles, Adams & Figueroa looking West, 1924
  
Luncheon for ladies of L.A. Chamber of Commerce in Hawaii, 1907
  
Spring Street North from Fourth St., Los Angeles, 1924
 

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Scott's Run

Photos from a West Virginia mining town, by Lewis Hine.

 Scott's Run, West Virginia. Children of employed miner 
at Sessa Hill - Ewra Hennar's children, 1936
  
 Scott's Run, West Virginia. Children of miners, March 1937
  
 Scott's Run, West Virginia. Interior of the Jere WPA nursery. 
These children are from unemployed miners' homes. March 1937
  
 Scott's Run, West Virginia. Interior of the Jere WPA nursery. 
These children are from unemployed miners' homes. March 1937
  
 Scott's Run, West Virginia. Woman gathering coal, March 1937
  
Scott's Run, West Virginia. Johnson family - father unemployed, March 1937

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Burt V. Brooks

The artist Burt Vernon Brooks was one of the outstanding chroniclers of daily life in the Swift River Valley before it was inundated to create the Quabbin Reservoir. Born in Brimfield, Mass., in 1849 and raised in Monson, Brooks moved to Greenwich with his family in the 1870s, where he worked on the family farm. At some unclear point before he turned 40, Brooks became active as an artist, painting local homes and scenery and taking photographs of the landscape, residents, and daily life in the Quabbin region. A prolific photographer, he was, in the words of historian Donald W. Howe, "hardly ever seen without his camera strapped to his back," remaining active for decades. Three years after following his second wife to the west, Brooks died in Los Angeles in 1934. The great majority of the 92 photographs in this collection are 5x7" dry plate glass negatives taken by Brooks in the earliest years of the twentieth century, documenting the houses and people of Greenwich. Brooks' work includes landscapes, houses, and a significant series of images of the Hillside School, but some of his best works are studio portraits, images of people at home or with their carriages, and posed scenes of children at play or at work.

 Atkinson's Hollow, family and house, Prescott, Massachusetts, ca. 1910
  
Boating on a pond, Greenwich, Massachusetts, ca. 1910
  
Boy pulling girl in a toy wagon, Greenwich, Massachusetts, ca. 1910
  
Boys swimming in a pond, Greenwich, Massachusetts, ca. 1910
  
Checking the mail, Greenwich, Massachusetts, ca. 1910
 
Source: Digital Commonwealth