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Barnum, Deloss , circa 1859-1865

 Series — Box: 1

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

This stereograph collection is comprised of 513 stereographs that date from approximately 1846-1940. There are stereoviews from 24 different publishers and photographers, made up of donations from a many different donors, many unknown. Additionally, there are 21 images with no identifying information at the end of the finding aid. Stereograph publishers often bought other photographers’ negatives, and there was much sharing and republishing of the work of certain photographers, sometimes making it difficult to identify the original creator.

The collection is comprised of smaller, Bay Area-based photographers like M.M. Hazeltine and O.V. Lange, as well as larger, more established East coast-based stereograph publishers like Keystone View Company and Underwood and Underwood. Thus, the views represented vary widely and include views as far ranging as Alaska, Panama, and Seoul, Korea. The predominance of Bay Area and West coast photographers in the collection means that the majority of images are of California and related subjects such as Yosemite and the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and its aftermath. There are numerous views of San Francisco and its notable features, including the Cliff House, the Baldwin Hotel, Woodward’s Gardens, and Golden Gate Park. There are also views of other California cities, such as Sonora, Eureka, and Mendocino, and views that document the growth of railroads and of industries such as mining and lumbering. There is a series of views by M. Rieder documenting Southern California locations such as Long Beach, San Diego, Santa Barbara, and Catalina Island. Additionally, there are some whimsical, difficult-to-categorize stereographs of President and Mrs. McKinley, a “skeleton leaves” arrangement, and a playful series depicting a wedding.

Dates

  • circa 1859-1865

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research.

Biographical / Historical

Deloss Barnum (1825–1873) was one of the first photographers to begin offering stereoviews, around 1859-1860. He started out in Boston as a dagguereotypist in 1857, and moved his studio around Boston between 1857-1860. He photographed public events, such as a visit to Boston by the Prince of Wales in 1860, as well as nature scenes and gardens around New York and Boston, including Niagara Falls, Saratoga, and the Hudson River. He died young, at the age of 48, in Cortland, New York.

Information taken from:

Heil, Douglas. The Art of Stereography. McFarland Publishing, 2017.

Extent

8 stereographs

Language of Materials

English

Repository Details

Part of the California Historical Society Repository

Contact:
678 Mission Street
San Francisco CA 94105