Samuel Smith (photographer)

Samuel Smith (February 28, 1802 – July 18, 1892) was an English photographer.

'Philosopher'

Samuel Smith
Born28 February 1802
Tydd St.Giles, Isle of Ely
Died18 July 1892
Wisbech, Isle of Ely, England
Occupationtimber merchant and photographer
Years active1852-1864
Spouse1.Myra 2.Frances
Childrentwo daughters

Biography

Samuel Smith was born in Tydd St.Giles the son of John Smith, farmer. He was a merchant. He had two children Emily and Julia, after the death of his first wife Myra he remarried. His marriage to Frances Dawbarn (b1842) eldest daughter of Thos Dawbarn, Esq of Alfred House, Wisbech took place at the parish of Hunstanton church on 4 September 1860. In the presence of Thomas and Sylvester Dawbarn.[1] He died on 18 July 1892 and was buried in Wisbech General Cemetery on July 22, 1892.[2]

Career

He had been a timber merchant and a director of the Wisbech Gas Light & Coke company His earliest dated photograph Is that of 12 October 1852. His work dates between that year and 1864. Many images are of buildings long since disappeared, such as the stone Town bridge, Butter Cross, Old Workhouse and Octagon Church. The General Cemetery Chapel built in 1848 would have followed as the roof had been removed by Fenland District Council, and it was in danger of demolition, however Wisbech Society carried out a restoration project and it can now be compared with Smith's image of 1856. His image of Leach's eight-sail mill (c1853) captures the mill before the sails were removed.[3] Smith was a member of the Wisbech Working Men's Institute as was another photographer William Ellis (missionary). After Ellis's death Smith printed some of his photographs.[4]

Legacy

The majority of Smith's surviving images are held in two collections. 190 negatives and over 100 prints are in the Wisbech & Fenland Museum and 125 other negatives and about 70 prints at the Kodak museum. These were acquired by Kodak in 1971 and compared to those held at Wisbech. An exhibition in Peckover House in 1973 was followed by others in London and the USA. No other comparable body of work is known to have survived from the 1850s for any other town in England.[5] He features on the Cambridgeshire Photogrphers website (http://www.fadingimages.uk/photoSm.asp) along with other local pioneering photographers Lilian Ream and Geoff Hastings.

gollark: Not having /tpa makes trading and interaction *so* much more irritating.
gollark: And /tpa.
gollark: I think we should at least have maybe ten /home's.
gollark: Why no TP?
gollark: I guess I'll just have to set up a public teleport station at spawn.

References

  1. "Married". Stamford Mercury. 14 September 1860.
  2. FJ Gardiner (1898). History of Wisbech and Neighbourhood, During the last 50 Years. Gardiner & Co.
  3. Michael Millward & Brian Coe (1974). Victorian Landscape. Ward Lock Ltd. ISBN 0-7063-1855-2.
  4. Thurman, Dorothy. "Ellis of Madagascar". Wisbech Society Annual Report. 57: 9–11.
  5. Coe, Brian (1974). "Samuel Smith: Photographer of Wisbech". The Wisbech Society 35th Annual Report. 35: 13–15.

Further reading

Monger, Garry (2019). "Fenland's Photographers". The Fens: Wisbech & Surounding. December: 18 via https://thefensmag.co.uk/our-issues/.

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