50163.
Sixth-plate tinted daguerreotype by Meade Brothers, Albany, NY of a young girl. This is the image below showing the Meade Brothers imprint on the case and an enlargement of the image on the table.
Sixth-plate tinted daguerreotype by Meade Brothers, Albany, NY of a young girl. This is the image below showing the Meade Brothers imprint on the case and an enlargement of the image on the table.
Sixth-plate daguerreotype by E.D. Palmer. The maker of this image was identified by an image with the same backdrop in the 2013 Daguerreian Annual in an article by Mark Koenigsberg on page 62. Palmer’s card is displayed in the image at the base of the table. This image is too dark to show the card. E.D. Palmer operated a gallery at the Old Museum in Utica, NY from Aug. 1842 through Jan. 1843 which dates this image to that period. It is possible that E.D. Palmer is Erastus Dow Palmer, the man who went on to become a renowned sculptor.
Quarter-plate daguerreotype by Thos. Hankins, Artist, Nashville, Tenn. of two attractive, affectionate women. The woman on the right wears a brooch with an image of a girl, probably a daguerreotype.
Sixth-plate daguerreotype of busy street scene. Chitty’s Express wagon in foreground with deliveries on board.
Tinted daguerreotype of a couple, probably an engagement photo, with engraved plate border within the inner outline of the mat.(D)
Honorable Thomas Kempshall and daughter Susan Kempshall. Thomas Kempshall was Mayor of Rochester, NY in 1837.
John Denier walking the tight-rope across Broadway (5th Street). He is proceeding west on a rope stretched across the street from Wilson’s Minstrels, which adjoins the building on the southeast corner of 5th and Pine, St. Louis, Mo.
No. 430. Rope Walker. Unknown wire-walker from the Russell House, Eureka Springs, Arkansas. F.F. Fyler’s photo studio can be seen at the very left.
Blondini at Coney Island, NY. This wire-walker capitalized on the name of Blondin by adding an “i” to his name.