Who Were They?

Lost and forgotten photos from the past

This week’s Sepia Saturday prompt features a boy with two birds. Geese, I think. I took a flight in another direction and give you two birds crossing a river for some reason.

Graduating?

Graduating?

I have no idea what is going on in this photo although it appears to be two women wearing the mortar board style flat hats used in graduation ceremonies worldwide. Perhaps one was graduating from left side of the stream to right? It makes no sense whatsoever. I also wonder if the snapshot after this one shows the two women flat on their  backs in the water, heh.

Two birds, a donkey and a baby

Two birds, a donkey and a baby

This photo shows possibly one of the women from the previous photo, but now with a baby sitting on a donkey. The women are wearing Mexican style straw hats. This looks like one of those tourist snapshots such as featured in my site avatar.

Yee haw!

Yee haw!

For more birds and probably even a few of the avian variety, click over to Sepia Saturday. You will be happy you did!

Flights of fancy

Wicker chair

What’s the deal with the scruffy fur?

Today’s photograph features a young girl, a wicker chair and a ragged looking fur throw. The girl’s expression seems to say “what exactly is that *thing* on the chair?” The turned wicker of the chair hints at the 1890s and the deckled edges of the card confirm that.

The photographer was R. L. Henderson from Bellaire, Ohio, “opposite post office.” Bellaire is on the Ohio River, across from Wheeling, West Virginia and was founded in 1834. In its early days it was an anchor point for the famous B&O railroad, and served as a strategic holding during the Civil War, as Ohio was pro-Union and Virginia was of course part of the Confederacy. The Federal Camp Jefferson was established there as a bivouac point for soldiers coming in from other parts of the Ohio River Valley and beyond on the B&O. From there they went on to the front lines. Later on, Bellaire became famous for its glass industry, being the manufacturing hub for window, bottle and utility glass companies, as well as Imperial Glass, lending the city the nickname “Glass City.”

Bellaire is a hop skip & a jump away from where my cousins grew up in Shadyside, OH, and where my aunt and uncle lived in St Clairesville until my uncle passed away a few years ago. It’s a coal mining, industrial area with small settlements along the river. The houses are average sized and the lot sizes are large compared to city life. Several athletes have come from the area, including Brickyard Kennedy of the Pittsburg Pirates (who pitched against Cy Young and Honus Wagner), Lance Mehl of the New York Jets (who testified in favor of Jerry Sandusky), and Joey Galloway (currently an ESPN analyst).

Whiskers2

 

This type of mustache is what I would term a “walrus” in that it covers the upper lip in a healthy fashion and extends past the sides of the lips a bit. Other than the generous ‘stache, this fellow has close cropped hair and a receding hairline giving him quite a lot of forehead. Gentlemen may be able to suggest whether the mustache is an attempt to compensate for the lack of hair upstairs, or not.

The photographer was J. C. Moulton of Fitchburg, MA. Moulton was the oldest established photographer in Fitchburg, having opened his shop in 1848, according to the book Fitchburg, Massachusetts, Past and Present, published in 1887. He was also a deacon in the Rollstone Congregational Church and made contributions to the local art society, as well as shot steroscopic images. He must have been well patronized as Google quickly turns up a number of results for him.

Whiskers1

W. R. Austin

The back of this photograph was inscribed W. R. Austin in pencil, presumably identifying our subject as said person. The mustache featured here today is in the style of George Armstrong Custer, famous Civil War general and infamous Indian fighter.

The photographers were Taylor & Preston, known to be in business between 1879-1883 at least. They were fairly prolific as a search on their names yields several results quickly.

UPDATE: Iggy found William R. Austin of Salem, MA was born in 1843. His wife was Sarah (1845) and children Arthur L (1869) and Nellie (1870). Excellent research!!

Whiskers3

 

This gentleman is showing off some fine, white side burns, while leaving the area around his mouth clean shaven. It may be an illusion, but it looks a bit like his hair comes off his forehead in a “kewpie doll” style. Do you see that too?

The photograph can be dated to the 1890s, as the deckled edges of cabinet cards were introduced at the beginning of the decade and remained popular throughout. This person sat for his photograph in the H. F. Alley studio in Salem, MA. I found the photographer’s first name was Hiram, in a Salem Directory dated 1886, which included the surrounding towns of Beverly, Peabody, Danvers and Marblehead. The particular block – LeFavour Block – included the LeFavour Opera House, which likely would have been a popular attraction in town and probably was a good location for the photographic business.