Tag: Pottsville

Skies Over Schuylkill County – Aerial Photography 3

(Third in a series)

One of the large format cameras needed to do aerial surveying.

A large-format camera used for aerial surveying.

 

In previous posts we shared with you two sets of aerial images: the borough of St. Clair, PA and a coal mine at Raven Run, PA. Today we we provide several close-ups showing how Pottsville, PA looked in the 1930s. We enlarged these images from a single aerial photo of Pottsville, PA taken during a 1936 fly-over.

On the left is one of the large cameras used to take these kinds of photos by the Dallin Aerial Survey Company.

This Pottsville, PA photo was taken on May 5th, 1936 looking south over the town. The shadows seem to confirm the time shown on the courthouse clock—it was 1:23pm in Pottsville.

 

 

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May 5th, 1936. Pottsville, PA

 

It is 1:23pm according to the courthouse clock.

The Courthouse clock shows the early afternoon time. View is from Sanderson Street side of building.

 

County jail, next to the Courthouse.

County jail, next to the Courthouse.

 

The Philadelphia & Reading passenger train station.

The Philadelphia & Reading passenger train station.

 

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Industry along the rails.

 

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N. Centre Street, the wide street on the left half of the image, has midday traffic.

 

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A building foundation under construction can be seen at center left.

 

Citation:

Hagley Museum and Library Digital Archives

Skies Over Schuylkill County – Aerial Photography 1

(First in a series)

Founded in 1924, they surveyed Mid-Atlantic states.

Founded in 1924, the Dallin Survey Company took to the skies in the Mid-Atlantic states, out of their home base in Philadelphia.

 

The Dallin Aerial Survey Company made several fly-overs of Schuylkill County in the 1930s. They specialized in photographing business and industry, as well as city and town views.

We share some of images results here.

In this first post in a series of posts, their single-engine plane flew over St. Clair, PA in 1937. They captured the layout of the entire town in the foreground and Pottsville can be seen in the background. People traveling north from Pottsville had to ride through St. Clair, which would change once the St. Clair by-pass was completed decades later.

 

April 17, 1937. The towns of Saint Clair and Pottsville are seen in this single image.

April 17, 1937. The towns of Saint Clair (close) and Pottsville (further afield) are seen in this single image.

 

The road from Pottsville leading into St. Clair is shown.

The road from Pottsville leading down into St. Clair.

 

Downtown St. Clair.

Downtown St. Clair.

 

Pottsville in the distance, with the courthouse in the center.

Pottsville in the distance, with the landmark Schuylkill County Courthouse in the center. 

Citation:

Hagley Museum and Library Digital Archives


 

 

 

Photographer of the Mines: Pottsville’s George Bretz

First in a series about the photographer and his work

1884: Arnaux Electric Company dynamo inside Shenandoah's Kohinoor mine. This produced electricity to illuminate the lamps needed for George Bretz's photography experiment.

1884: Arnaux Electric Company dynamo inside Shenandoah’s Kohinoor mine. This produced electricity to illuminate the lamps needed for George Bretz’s photography experiment.

The George Bretz Gallery on the Southwest corner of Center & Market Streets in Pottsville, PA

The George Bretz Gallery on the southwest corner of Center & Market Streets in Pottsville, PA.

We have shared a number of heartbreaking photographs of breaker boys taken by visitors to the Anthracite Region on our Facebook page and we even did an initial blog post on such an image. Binding to our cultural memory, these images have been valuable to understanding what the lives of mining families were like.

Photos taken by another photographer, more local in origin, have contributed to the visual history of the Anthracite Region: George M. Bretz, (1842-1895) had his studio in Pottsville, PA and he specialized in photography mining scenes.

Approached by the Smithsonian Institution to photograph anthracite miners at work inside the mines, Bretz knew that long camera shutter speeds required above ground in normal light needed to be longer in the darkness of a coal mine. Therefore, he decided to bring more light with him. Traveling to Shenandoah, PA in 1884, with a temporary electrical set-up (see photo at top), he brought a dynamo to generate the electricity needed to power lights that had never before been used underground. Unsure of whether this technique would work or of associated dangers, Bretz took the lights inside the Kohinoor Colliery mine.

The anticipation must have been great as Bretz developed the photo plates. The end results were reviewed  in the 1885 edition of the Annual Report of the Secretary of Internal Affairs of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania: “[T]he experiment was a perfect success, and marks a new era in the history of photographing mining views.”

Shown below are nine of the photos taken at the Kohinoor mine, and from a visit to the Indian Ridge Colliery. Even the slightest body movement resulted in some blurring.

Face of breast, three miners at work.

Face of breast, three miners at work.

Indian Ridge Colliery, breast No.1.

Indian Ridge Colliery, breast No.1.

Coal breaker, Kohinoor.

Coal breaker, Kohinoor.

Gangway from breast No.39.

Gangway from breast No.39.

Lift Operator, Kohinoor Mine.

Lift Operator, Kohinoor Mine.

Car lift attended by two miners.

Car lift attended by two miners.

Car lift and miners.

Car lift and miners.

Interior of Kohinoor mine.

Interior of Kohinoor mine.

Face of breast with miner using patent drill.

Face of breast with miner using patent drill.

Sadly, the George M. Bretz Photography Studio burned on November 13, 1892, (article below), and thousands of his negatives were destroyed. Luckily, the Smithsonian copies of the Shenandoah underground photographs have survived.

November 14, 1892 article from Shenandoah's Evening Herald.

November 14, 1892 article from the Shenandoah PA Evening Herald.

It was front page news, (article below), when Bretz passed away on the 12th of April, 1895 at age 53. The Shenandoah Evening Herald called him “one of the leading photographers of the state.”

George M. Bretz obituary from the Evening Herald.

George M. Bretz obituary from the Shenandoah PA Evening Herald. April 13, 1895

Photographer George Bretz in 1875.

Photographer George Bretz in 1875.

 

Citations:

Geller, Kathryn. “Anthracite Museum Displays Work of Molly Maguires Photographer.” The Titusville Herald [Titusville, PA] 23 March 1992: Page 7. Print.

University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) Digital Collection.

 

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