Quiet glimpses of the turn of the century city through an amateur’s camera | Eph...
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Quiet glimpses of the turn of the century city through an amateur’s camera
On the surface, Robert Bracklow probably appeared to his customers and neighbors to be a typical New Yorker.
Born in 1849, he immigrated to Gotham with his family when he was a child. He grew up during the Civil War and early Gilded Age, then made his living as a stationer and printer—owning his own legal stationary shop in Lower Manhattan, according to the New-York Historical Society.
He lived in Brooklyn, and though he never married, he seemed devoted to his lady friend of many years, a schoolteacher.
But beneath the ordinariness of his life, Bracklow had a special passion for photography, which he discovered in his early 30s.
During early morning outings around Manhattan and sometimes to outer boroughs like Brooklyn, Bracklow, nicknamed “Daylight Bob” because he was afraid of the dark (and darkrooms too), “created a picture history of New York’s growth at the turn of the century,” according to a 1984 article in Photography.
Contemporaries like Alfred Stieglitz (a fellow member of the Camera Club of New York in the 1890s) were pushing the boundaries of photography as a fine art form.
Yet Bracklow “never embraced Stieglitz’s more abstract artistic vision, nor did he use his photography to expose social ills or make a clear political statement, like his contemporary Jacob Riis,” wrote the New-York Historical Society.
Instead, most of the thousands of photos Bracklow took were documentary-style, unsentimental glimpses of New York.
His camera captured horse-pulled wagons meandering along rundown streets, new skyscrapers reaching toward the heavens, shantytowns and shacks, corner saloons, beachgoers at Coney Island, and other scenes in a changing city.
The fascinating part about Bracklow’s photography is how all the images he took of a 19th century city shifting into the modern era made it into the hands of museum curators.
It didn’t happen until decades after he passed away. Bracklow died in 1920, and his possessions went to his lady friend, including “3,000 glass plates and 715 platinum prints in 28 scrapbooks,” states Photography.
“After the house she lived in was sold 30 years later, the collection came to the attention of Alexander Alland, Sr., who bought the negatives from a second-hand furniture dealer and made silver prints from them,” per Photography.
“In 1982, the scrapbooks were given to the New-York Historical Society by a descendant of the photographer’s sweetheart.”
In 2015, the New-York Historical Society and Metropolitan New York Library Council digitized the entire collection.
Here are some of Bracklow’s images: They aren’t romantic or necessarily artistic, but they perfectly document with composition and clarity the New York he lived in, which was in flux.
[All photos New-York Historical Society Robert L. Bracklow Photograph Collection]
Tags: Old Photo of NYC Bracklow, Photos New York 1900, Robert Bracklow NYC Photos, Robert Bracklow Photos, Turn of the Century NYC Photos
This entry was posted on January 31, 2022 at 4:22 am and is filed under art, Houses of worship, Lower Manhattan, Midtown, Music, art, theater, Upper Manhattan. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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