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The Non Shorpy Web All Stars.

Rmccamey

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,870
Location
Central Texas
From the Traces of Texas website:
A meeting of the "Spit and Whittle" club on the steps of the bank in downtown Memphis, Texas, 1938.
Photo taken by Dorothea Lange.

Memphis, TX 1938.jpg
 
Messages
18,219
Subject of photographic portrait identified as W. Spalding & taken in New York City by photographer Rufus Anson c. 1860's. Not known if Spalding could be related to Wilbur Spalding, maybe the father of the early game of baseball in New York City.

IMG_2211.PNG


Unknown pre Civil War baseball player in New York City.

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What a piece of lumber!
 

Michael A

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,287
From today's Guardian,
3896.jpg

Ted Croner, Sharpie in a Cafeteria, 1946
Croner was born in Baltimore but grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina. During the second world war he worked as an aerial photographer with the US Army Air Corps. In 1946, he enrolled in Alexey Brodovitch’s photography class at the New School for Social Research. Towards the end of the 1940s, his work was successfully exhibited at MoMA in New York. Alongside commercial assignments for Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue, he pursued his own photography, producing experimental, cinematic images of cafeterias, solitary diners and the city after dark.
Photograph: © Catherine Croner, Courtesy Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York
 

Michael A

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,287
Also from the Guardian
1727.jpg

Helen Levitt, New York, 1942
Born and raised in New York, Levitt made most of her photographs in the city’s streets. Her interest in photography began in 1931; she learned darkroom technique while working for a portrait photographer and by 16 had decided to become a professional. She was especially inspired by the photographs of Walker Evans and Henri Cartier-Bresson, both of whom became friends. Following Cartier-Bresson’s lead, Levitt bought a 35mm camera and settled on the subject matter she would pursue for the next 40 years: community street life.
Photograph: © Estate of Helen Lewitt, Courtesy Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York
 
Messages
18,465
Location
Nederland
From today's Guardian,
3896.jpg

Ted Croner, Sharpie in a Cafeteria, 1946
Croner was born in Baltimore but grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina. During the second world war he worked as an aerial photographer with the US Army Air Corps. In 1946, he enrolled in Alexey Brodovitch’s photography class at the New School for Social Research. Towards the end of the 1940s, his work was successfully exhibited at MoMA in New York. Alongside commercial assignments for Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue, he pursued his own photography, producing experimental, cinematic images of cafeterias, solitary diners and the city after dark.
Photograph: © Catherine Croner, Courtesy Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York
That is certainly a sharp looking homburg he's wearing.
 

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