Introduction and the Howes Brothers Collection
Photographs offer a unique glimpse into a family's lifestyle by capturing ancestors engaged in their daily activities while using their everyday belongings.
Howes Brothers Photographic Collection
Possibly one of the largest and most aesthetically pleasing collections of turn-of-the-century glass dry-plate negatives from a single photographic concern in the United States exists today in the Ashfield Historical Society of Ashfield, MA. Ashfield natives Alvah, George, and Walter Howes worked as itinerant photographers from 1882-1907. The Howes brothers traveled through the Berkshire Hills, the Connecticut Valley of Western Massachusetts, the Connecticut River Valley from the Vermont border south to Hartford, and "occasionally as far as Waltham, Massachusetts; Manchester, New Hampshire; Woonsocket, Rhode Island; and Eastern New York."
The surviving 23,000 glass negatives document "social and economic conditions in Western New England during the late nineteenth century." The collection is also significant for the record it provides of the United States' industrial and social landscape at that time. Entire families of various economic classes posed in front of their homes, often displaying their prized possessions and their pets. Merchants stood in front of their shops and groups of schoolchildren posed by their schools. The Howes brothers photographs feature consistently superior photographic technique.
Microfilm Collection
The Howes brothers photographic collection, ca 1882-1907.
Call Number: Microfilm 5121 29 reels
Reproduces
21,889 Howes brothers glass plate negatives. The brothers numbered
their negatives consecutively each year as they developed them. The
microfilm images are arranged by those numbers. Arbitrary letter
suffixes distinguish plates with the same number taken in different
years. Sequential numbers alone do not reflect chronology. The
first reel offers an introductory synopsis of 650 images selected as
broadly representative of the entire set, both in subject matter,
geography, and photographic technique and quality.
The Howes brothers photographic collection ca. 1882-1907: Howes supplement - A.W. & G.E. Howes, Photographers.
Call Number Microfilm 5121a 3 reels
Supplement
to Microfilm 5121 consisting of reproductions of images acquired in
1982. Reel 2 and part of Reel 3 contain the collection of Edith La
Francis of Agawam, MA.
Indexes
The Howes brothers photographic collection, a guide to the computer-produced finding aids and to the microfilm.
Call Number: Microforms Area
Offers
a detailed description of each computer-produced finding aid. Also
contains a reel guide and instructions for locating images on the
microfilm. Appropriate section of this guide appears at the beginning
of each index. Note: "Plates
on Supplement Reels 2 and 3 are as yet not described in these finding
aids at all... A comprehensive search of the collection, therefore,
will require a direct examination of those reels."
Howes collection [index]. [Ashfield, MA? 1982?].
Call Number: Microforms Guides TR 652 H6 Sections 1 and 2
Provides a
computerized cross-reference system for a name or a town, and the
corresponding Howes brothers plate numbers. Cities and towns, ranging
from Agawam (AG) to Worthington (WO) are arranged alphabetically by
two-letter codes. Researchers identified 6,100 plates by location. The
Name Index lists names for the few plates which were identified by
persons, precise street addresses, and painted signs pictured in the
photographs.
KWIC (Key Word In Context) Indexes
Call Number: Microforms Area
The
13-volume computer printout provides access to individual images
through the words in the catalog content descriptions. The KWIC Indexes
list, "alphabetically by keyword, the contents of the 'Specific' and
'Detail' fields which are part of the catalog descriptions of the
plates."A KWIC Index
exists for each of the 14 general categories ( "Occupation,"
"Industrial site," "Portrait," "Structure," etc.) For example, under
the general category of "Structure," researchers can locate photographs
by using the terms, "Doric columns," "porch," and "triangle window." A
subject or word may appear in more than one file ("Tobacco" is in both
the "Occupation" and "Structure" categories).
Shelflist
Call Number: Microforms Area
This 5-volume computer printout arranges and describes, by plate number, all 21,889 negatives. It
identifies a location by town code, such as "BL" for Belchertown. The
date, if available, appears in a four-character field. For example,
"86" represents 1886 and "S" spring or summer. The style, most
frequently exterior, is noted only if the view is an interior one
("I"). The second
header line refers to broad categories ( "Structure," "Portrait,"
"Occupation," "Animal," etc.) from the International Museum of
Photography at the George Eastman House. "This scheme permits
identification of the [sic] major category as well as architectural
details, objects in the photographs, persons, places, firms, etc." A
reference in this list might describe a "structure" as a "two-story
Greek-revival house" with "Doric columns, two-story portico, roof
pediment, porch, triangle window." (Plate 4537).
Study Prints
The Special Collections and University Archives Department in the W.E.B. Du Bois Library maintains a set of 200 study prints produced from the Howes brothers glass negatives. The images are printed on 8 x 10 sheets, stored in print file preservers, and arranged by the Howes plate numbers.
Also of Interest
New England
reflections, 1882-1907: photographs/by the Howes brothers; edited by
Alan B.Newman, from the collection of the Ashfield Historical Societyand the Howes Family.
Call Number: TR 652 N47, Special Collections TR 652 N47 1981
Provides an introduction to the collection and reproduces nearly 200 Howes brothers photographs.
Find More
Search the Library Catalog by Subject to find additional photographic materials. Use the area followed by ''Pictorial Works." Examples of subject searches follow.
New England - Pictorial works
Northampton (Mass.) - Pictorial works
Description
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