Showing posts with label San Antonio TX. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Antonio TX. Show all posts

Friday, October 8, 2021

Charles A Gustafson

photographer: Gustafson
229 E Houston Street, San Antonio, TX
example from Kevin L. Mackey, President,
Grace Armantrout Museum Association

CABINET CARD 1 TX San Antonio Gustafson - Bertha Pasche Allport & brother Henry J Pasche (Photo IDed on back, “Grandma Allport)
photographer: Gustafson
229 E Houston Street, San Antonio, TX
example from Kevin L. Mackey, President,
Grace Armantrout Museum Association

CABINET CARD 2 TX San Antonio Gustafson - Brothers Adolph & Ferdinand Pasche, (younger siblings to Bertha Pasche Allport).

TEXAS PHOTOGRAPHER: Charles A Gustafson
Assembled History by Kevin L. Mackey,
President Grace Armantrout Museum
For more information see: Museum Facebook Page

TEXAS PHOTOGRAPHER --
CHARLES A. GUSTAFSON

Kevin L. Mackey,
President, Grace Armantrout Museum Association,
with much help from Eldric Bach, SMU DeGolyer Library.

CONNECTED TEXAS CITIES in Chronological order — Austin, Galveston, New Braunfels, San Antonio, El Paso, Beaumont, Dallas, Waco, & Houston

Born April 1, 1874 Superior, Houghton Co., Michigan
Died April 6. 1955 (aged 81) Long Beach, Los Angeles Co., California,
Find-A-Grave 166293909

1897
Austin Photo re-toucher in Austin for W. O. Journey

1899
Galveston photo re-toucher in Galveston for Harper & CO
1900
New Braunfels photographer according to census. Born April 1873 in Michigan, and married wife Josephine Gustafson in 1897.
1901
San Antonio Photographer advertisement 229 E. Houston St., San Antonio, Texas (Also seen in 5 Cabinet Cards 2 of which are mine)
1904
City Directory El Paso Photographer 21-26 Plaza block El Paso, Texas
1906 - 1909
there’s a Charles Gustafson operating as a photographer in Beaumont, TX.
1910
Dallas photographer salesman in Census, widowed.
1912– to at least 1916
Gustafson Studio, Waco 503 1/2 Austin St., Waco, Texas. He was present and active as “Gustafson Studio” according to ads in the Waco Morning News

Maybe in Waco maybe into the early 1920’s as evidenced by bulk of his existing work is “photo on board” from Waco. Dating by the identified people in the photographs indicates some may be after 1920 and the insurance claim bears the location as Waco in Aug. 1921

1918 Sep 12
Draft card shows born April 1, 1874 wife Margaret Gustafson, Photographer at 502 1/2 Main St., res. 3815 San Jacinto, Houston, Harris Co.
1920
Houston photographer, Census shows he is married to Margaret
1921 Mar. 5
Wife dies, Margaret Gertrude Barbara Roth Gustafson in St. Louis, MO. Death certificate shows residence in Houston.
1921 Aug 5
Residence at time of death claim for wife Margaret is Waco, Texas. According to insurance claim, “Knights and Ladies of Security.”

1925 Jan. 20
Passports shows he was married to Rose M. Gustafson, born in Gainesville FL Aug. 5, 1893, and they were married Nov. 16, 1924. His father was named Carl (German equivalent of Charles) and who is deceased. Occupation is Photographer, Houston, Tex. 502 1/2 Main St. SEE PHOTOs (Chas. Nephew is C.J. Richards) (Rose’s mother is Rosa May Bailey of Gainesville FL)
1930
Houston photographer, Census shows he is married to Rosa
1940
Houston photographer, Census shows he is married to Rose with children
1955 Apr 6
Died in 1955 in Long Beach, CA.

Charles Gustafson 1925 Passport Photo

TEXAS PHOTOGRAPHER: Charles A Gustafson
Assembled History by Kevin L. Mackey,
President Grace Armantrout Museum
For more information see: Museum Facebook Page



San Antonio (TX) Southern Messenger -
19 Dec 1901
Waco (TX) Morning News -
11 Mar 1912
Waco (YX) Morning News -
12 May 1913
Waco (TX) Morning News -
30 Jan 1916


Not the one you were looking for? Here's the photographer's INDEX by name. Listed here are all the Cabinet Card photographers of the 19th century found in LOST GALLERY. This is a work in progress. For a look at the original postings go to LOST GALLERY.

New examples and additional information are always welcome. Any additional information will help narrow the time that these precious antiques were made. All submissions should be free of glare and shadows. Do not crop. Leave a border around each card. The edges are sometimes an important clue to the age of the card.

Some examples on this page have been enhanced or restored for clarity and presentation here.

This page is free for educational and research purposes only but, as always, if the original owner of any of these examples objects to the use on this page, just let me know and they will be immediately removed.

Thursday, September 23, 2021

Samuel E. Jacobson

photographer: Jacobson
San Antonio, TX
example from contributor Kevin L Mackey
photographer: Jacobson
2 E Houston St., San Antonio, TX
example from contributor Kevin L Mackey
photographer: Jacobson
2 E Houston St., San Antonio, TX
example from contributor Kevin L Mackey

TEXAS PHOTOGRAPHER: Samuel E Jacobson
Assembled History by Kevin L. Mackey,
President Grace Armantrout Museum
For more information see: Museum Facebook Page

Samuel E. Jacobson was a photographer from San Antonio, Galveston, and Weimer. In his early days he worked for a time in partnership with a traveling photographer.

Mary E. Pallais was a business owner that added a photo studio ran by a photographer in Galveston. Her future husband, and then husband, was the photographer for all but one month of that time. She was also a photography business owner in San Antonio where her husband was the photographer. She was not herself a photographer.

Below I will post the narrative as well as a time line combining Samuel and Mary’s involvement in photography. We have no birth or death information on Samuel Jacobson, but do on Mary.

TEXAS PHOTOGRAPHER -- SAMUEL E. (& MARY E. JACOBSON) By Kevin L. Mackey, President, Grace Armantrout Museum Association (With assistance of Grace Armantrout Museum Director, Sallie A. Mackey)

Who is M. E. Jacobson? That is not a hard question for which to find an answer. It is only natural, for those that are history minded, to ask the question, “Who is M. E. Jacobson?” when they come across a cabinet card photograph bearing that as a photographer’s mark along with “San Antonio, Texas.” You expect to find out M. E. Jacobson was a photographer in San Antonio, and hope to find a name to put to the initials and a period of operation. This was an easy find with the current information on the internet, the initials stand for a Mary E. Jacobson, who was an important female photographer c1890, who was, at least partially responsible for teaching Ernst Wilhelm Raba the art of photography. You find out her husband Samuel was partnered with another well-known San Antonio photographer some ten years earlier, Henry A. Doerr, but it seems everything fell silent about him soon after. There is great consensus about these facts. The problem is, when you really start to check, very little of that is correct. My old adage is true, the history presented is only as accurate as its source, and what is known at the present moment. What I would discover, with my wife’s Sallie’s help, will rewrite most of that history.

To research Mary, I felt I needed to research her husband. To research her husband, I decided I needed to research the other photographers with whom he had partnered. That meant I needed to look into who Henry A. Doerr was, and naturally, his partners. In doing so, I came across a very enlightening article in the San Antonio Ledger, dated March 23, 1867. The article states that Mr. Henry Doerr was “the first gentleman who took photographs in San Antonio, and has been engaged in this business over 17 years.” That would push the known operating periods for Doerr back 15 years before those that give his history have it recorded. In doing the Doerr research, I was able to narrow down the time of the Jacobson partnership to July 25, 1875 to at least the end of April 1879.

What was Samuel “Semmy” Jacobson doing before he entered the partnership with Doerr? Stereographs titled “Views of Laredo, Texas” and attributed by pencil notation “c1875” are marked as being published by “Hunziker & Jacobson.” The National Stereoscopic Association states that it is possibly the work of “John A. Hunziker, no other ref. to Jacobson found.” Hunziker is noted as a traveling photographer who took scenic photos of Texas towns, so that would be a good guess, and as I have come across only two Jacobson photographers in Texas in the 1800’s, and Semmy Jacobson being the only one in that time period, I think it would be a good guess that

Sammy was working, at least for a time with Hunziker, and we now know what S. E. Jacobson was doing before the Doerr partnership. The scenic work seen in the Hunziker & Jacobson stereographs, was carried on while Samuel was partnered with Doerr and later with M. E. Jacobson.

To take a break from S. E. Jacobson, let us look at Mrs. M. E. Pallais, who was listed in the business listing under “Photographer” in the 1881 Galveston city directory. Who is this woman? Mrs. Pallais is the ten year widow of Daniel Henry Pallais. D. H. Pallais was an early resident of the Republic of Texas, in business at least as early as 1840 in Brazoria County when his business partnership there dissolved. D. H. moved to Galveston and was in the jewelry and book business soon after that. Mary Scheug (Americanized as “Shaw”) was born May 20, 1830 in Germany followed by three siblings, brother Michael William, Jr., and two sisters, Margaret, and Catherine before her mother passed away. Her father remarried and after having two more surviving children with his second wife, Frank Daniel and Philippine, the whole family immigrated to Galveston, Texas in 1846.



---Continued next row-

Within two years, her father was dead, her younger sister, (some records show her as young as 14), and herself, were married. Margaret married Benjamin Dix Blaney, and she, at 18 years old, married jeweler D. H. Pallais on Sept. 30, 1848. He was 13 years her senior and they took her two younger siblings into their home. The 1850 census records her brother “Mike Shawe” 14 years old, as apprentice to her husband, a watch maker, and Catherine as a child in the home. D. H. Pallais it seems did well in Galveston until 1861 or 1862 when he had to take his family and business inland to protect it from the Yankee invasion of the Galveston Island.

In 1865, we find Pallas is in partnership with F. D. Shaw Co. on Congress St. in Houston, F. D. being Mary’s step-brother. 1867 ads are for “D. H. Pallais & Shaw.” While the business remained in Houston, the Pallais family, Mary E. and daughter Mary Blaney Pallais (born Apr. 1, 1849), are living in Galveston at 120 E. Market St. in 1868. A major fire destroys the area in which the Houston business was located in 1869, and the business is moved to the same address as the Pallais residence in Galveston. The 1870 Galveston city directory now records that business as M. W. Shaw, Bro. & Pallais, indicating that both Michael and Frank are partners in the business. Frank D. is residing with the Pallais family and Michael W. is living and operating a second location at “110 & 112 Tremont or 23rd St.”

In 1871, Mary is widowed with the death of D. H., and F. D. takes over the running of the business from their address, but Mary is involved in the business. The firm will continue to use the name “D. H. Pallais” and make claim to having been established in 1845, before anyone now living was in the firm, but likely the date when D.H. Pallais first opened on the Strand in Galveston.

Daughter Mary Blaney Pallais married Nicholas Sabell on Sept. 25, 1873, a man about 12 years her senior, and only 6 years her mother’s junior, the business directories list him as a carpenter. In 1874, the business in newspaper still listed Pallais, but the city directory listing had become “M. W. Shaw, & Bro.” at NW Corner of Market and Tremont. In 1877, Agnes C. Blaney, niece to Mrs. M. E. Pallais, married Adam A. Doerr at Mrs. Pallais’ home. At this time, we have found no relation to photographer Henry A. Doerr.

With the separation of businesses with her brothers, Mary bought the business of J. W. Hebert for $10,000 on Feb. 10, 1878 and opened the business under the name “Mrs. M. E. Pallais Variety Store” at 221 & 223 Postoffice Street, Galveston. Initially, her half brother, Frank D. Shaw was her manager. It focused on interior décor type items, wallpaper, window shades, cornice and moldings, pictures, and looking glasses (mirrors) but included other games, toys and amusements. In December, she changed

managers to her son-in-law, Nicholas S. Sabell, and he would then be the manager until the widowed Mrs. M. E. Pallais remarried.

In October of 1880 it was announced that Mrs. M. E. Pallais would be opening a “photographic gallery” in her business and December 1st the ad said it was open with F. W. Bartlett as photographer. He would remain the photographer all of one month, with a January 1, 1881, ad mentioning “Pictures taken at the new Photograph and Art Gallery.” Then, for some reason the gallery would close. It could be because F. W. Bartlett was charged, according to the January 1st paper, with “carrying concealed deadly weapons.” It could also have to do with the article that appeared January 2nd, and for a great number of weeks after, that photographer P. H. Rose had bought the negative collections of several photographers, including 1,000 of Frederick W. Bartlett, amassing a collection of 30,000 from which he was ready to make duplicates at a reduced rate. The 1880 business directory listed the business of Mrs. M. E. Pallais under photographers, but not meaning that she was a photographer. If she was, there would have been no reason to close the new gallery just because they lost one photographer.

Let us leave Mrs. M. E. Pallais, the lady, for a moment and go back to Samuel “Semmy” E. Jacobson for the moment.

We had left him separating from the H. A. Doerr partnership in April of 1879. What he did in the mean time is unknown, some having him dropping out of sight about that time photographically. He does appear through the rest of 1879 on the decoration committee for an event in the San Antonio German press. In 1880, he is mentioned several times as a delegate to the Bexar County Republican convention. In March of 1881, we find him in Galveston where he had been hired to work for a business called … “Mrs. M. E. Pallais.”

A March 20, 1881 advertisement announced the reopening of the “New Photographic and Art Gallery” to be operated by photographer S. E. Jacobson on the 21st, managed by N. S. Sabell, and Mrs. M. E. Pallais was the owner.

I think you may have suspected that Mrs. M. E. Pallais would somehow tie in with S. E. Jacobson. By September 8, 1881, the widow, Mary E. Pallais, would be, Mrs. S. E. Jacobson or M. E. Jacobson. Sammy replaced Mary’s son-in-law as manager for the business within a week, Mary rescinding his power of attorney immediately and announcing. Nicholas Sabell was no longer employed with her business in the newspapers.


----continued on next row--

He would take the Jacobsons to court (and win his case to the amount of one dollar) and go in a competing business. In November of 1881, the business as “S. E. Jacobson (Late Mrs, M. E. Pallais 121 and 123 Postoffice St.)” announced they were “Selling out at and below cost!” “S. E. JACOBSON” remained in business through 1882 and sold in early 1883 to J. H. Flett. March 20, 1883, Flett advertised those that had left pictures with S. E. Jacobson, needed to pick them up or they would be sold.

Let us for a moment stop to take note of what went on with the business in Galveston. Mrs. M. E. Pallais opened a business, and had managers who ran the business for her. The business added photography to their product, hiring photographers to operate that part. The Galveston city directory noted the business of Mrs. M. E. Pallais was in the photography business, not that the lady herself was a photographer. If she had been a photographer, there would have been no need to close the photo gallery when they lost their photographer until they found a new one. The business changed names when she got married, to “S. E. Jacobson” and was operated as such until they sold out. This will make understanding who, or what “M. E. Jacobson” is in San Antonio.

For the next couple of years there were legal notices in the paper, people taking the Jacobsons to court and people the Jacobsons took to court to collect rent and so on. The 1884 Galveston city directory has Semmy working as a photographer in the studio above their 221 E. Postoffice St. address and them living at 253 E. Broadway, on the corner of 20th. The San Antonio German language paper had an article in the Sep. 26, 1884 issue talking about the difficulty they were having in dealing with Mexican officials, mentioning that, presumably Jacobson, a once San Antonio photographer, now in Galveston, being charged $1.00, and required to fill out two papers. and get four stamps of approval, just to take a photo of Eagle Pass from the Mexican side of the border. It is not mentioned as a “current” happening and I suspect it was a story related to him by Semmy. when he lived in San Antonito, as he mentions keeping the papers as a souvenir. An article in November of 1886 mentions Mrs. S. E. Jacobson being one of three people who had property sold for not paying their street maintenance tax. On April 13, 1887 a “serious blaze” caused by her tenant, did a great deal of damage to her two story frame building on Postoffice Steet. The paper mentions that Mrs. S. E. Jacobson was living in San Antonio at that time.

Let us move on to San Antonio with Mr. and Mrs. Jacobson. In the photographer’s listing for San Antonio for 1887, the business of M. E. Jacobson is listed at 2 E. Houston St. The listing is for the business, just as it was in Galveston, because, Semmy Jacobson is there and working as a photographer, but is not in the listing. He is the photographer for M. E. Jacobson. In the listing of the people named Jacobson there are two. “Jacobson, Mary E. (Mrs. S. E.)” is listed as “photographer” with studio at 2 E. Houston and residence at “31 7th.” Semmy E. Jacobson is listed, no profession listed, but that he works “with M. E. Jacobson,” and 31 7th for residence. She is the business owner, it is her money behind the business just as it was in Galveston, Semmy is the “talent,” as the actual photographer. This fact is very clear when you read the German language articles and advertisements for M. E. Jacobson. They consistently mention “Herr” Jacobson’s photographs and “Herr” Jacobson’s work, “Herr” being the German equivalent to “Mr.”

The first San Antonio ad found for the Jacobsons ran from January 7, 1889 to at least into April 1890, in the San Antonio German language “Freie Presse für Texas” is the first advertisement found in San Antonio newspapers and reads, in translation, “Mr. M. E. Jacobson has the only German photographic studio in San Antonio. Good job and cheap prices. No. 2 East Houston Street next to the bridge on the ground floor.”

The Feb. 1, 1890 advertisement added, “The exhibited pictures testify to the artistic ability of Mr. Jacobson.”

An April 9, 1890 article in the “Freie Presse für Texas” in translation reads, “The last issue of the ‘Graphic’ to be released in Chicago brings an interesting account of San Antonio from February by the ophthalmologist Dr. Wm. Neiter. The artist has come up with a series of very good illustrations made from photographs taken by Mr. Jacobson."

The 1892 San Antonio city directory had an ad advertising “Jacobson’s new photographic studio” at 113 Alamo Plaza. It also listed Mary E. Jacobson in the photography business and Semmey E. working with M. E. Jacobson. In December there was an article in the “Freie Presse für Texas” mentioning that a R. A. Huffman was under $100 bond for threatening M. Jacobson and for sending threats through the mail, because Hoffman thought M. Jacobson was “seeking to have intimate rapport with his family.” If it was Mary, or Semmy, or another person altogether named “M. Jacobson,” is unknown.

The February 21, 1893 “Freie Presse für Texas” carried a small notice stating that “Jacobson’s new photographic studio” was located at 113 Alamo Plaza over Hager Moths & Breitling furniture store.

. From May 16th until at least September 23rd, a larger advertisement was carried stating to the effect (translated) that “Mr. M. E. Jacobson, well known photographer, set up a new studio at Alamo Street No. 113. In his establishment, Mr. Jacobson has applied all the innovations for photography in the modern age, and the furnishing are extremely elegant and in perfection, not inferior to any of the most prominent cities. A visit to this great studio is warmly recommended to our readers.” Once again, the initials of his wife have been applied to him, and no mention of her is in the notice. Semmey Jacobson is the one running the business, and the photographer.

In a rare advertisement in an English language newspaper, the San Antonio based Catholic paper, “Southern Messenger,” is a simple ad on August 31, 1893 that reads, “JACOBSON, The PHOTOGRAPHIC ARTIST, Alamo Plaza.”

Again in the German language newspaper, is an article mentions “S. Jacobson” providing a group photo of a German musical group, appearing in both the Dec. 23, and Dec. 26, 1893 editions. The papers then fall silent about the Jacobsons’ involvement in photography in San Antonio after that.

A few sources have noted San Antonio photographer Ernst Wilhelm Raba (1874-1951) got his start in the studio of the Jacobsons. Some attribute this to Mrs. M. E. Jacobson, while others attribute it to Mr. Samuel Jacobson. The only record I have found, thus far, of either Jacobson and Ernst W. Raba, shows a very brief connection with Mr. Samuel Jacobson, not Mary.

In the June 30, 1894 Weimar Mercury (Weimar, Texas), an advertisement ran for a “New Photograph Studio” run by Jacobson & Raba to open in mid July. On July 14, an ad ran, “New Photograph Gallery NOW OPEN. Call and see Samples. PRICES REASONABLE. JACOBSON AND RABA.” Assuming this is Ernst Raba, he would have been 20 years old at the time. The ad for July 21st, still includes Raba, but that is the last mention of him with the business.

The December 28, 1894 ad in the Mercury only list S. E. Jacobson. Jacobson would have a studio in Weimer, according to his November 23, 1895 ad, until November 30th, 1895. It gave an itemized list of things Samuel would then be selling in auction on the 30th, if not sold before. In the first part of the new year, 1896, S. E. Jacobson is still mentioned and the only photographer in the Weimer business listing in the “Mercury,” but likely, no one had taken the time to remove it.

March of 1896, a new photographer, Hermann Klockmann, was advertising he was in Mr. Jacobson’s old gallery. Of interesting note, the July 27, 1895 “Mercury,” in an article on a baseball tournament mentions that “Mr. S. E. Jacobson” took photos of their team which sold “like hot cakes.” It would be interesting to find if one of those still exists.

In 1896, “Mary E. (Mrs. Samuel) Jacobson” is listed in the Galveston city directory, living at “1804 N 1/2.” Semmy is not listed with her. Again in 1898 she is listed in the same way, “Mary E. (Mrs. Samuel) Jacobson” and residence at “1804 Ave. N 1/2,” and again Semmy is not listed. Galveston city directories list the same home address as her brother Frank D. Shaw.

Mary E. Shaw Pallais Jacobson Born - May 1830 Lampertheim, Kreis Bergstraße, Hessen, Germany
Died - Oct. 29, 1909 (aged 79)

No birth or death dates for Samuel E. Jacobson.

TEXAS PHOTOGRAPHER MARY E. & SAMUEL E. JACOBSON GALVESTON - SAN ANTONIO - WEIMAR
Mrs. Mary E. Pallais, Mrs. Mary E. Jacobson,
Samuel E. Jacobson (Sammy and Semmey Jacobson)

circa 1875
"Hunziker & Jacobson" Stereograph card of church in Laredo - Samuel Jacobson partnered with John A. Hunziker reportedly a traveling photographer who took scenic photos of Texas places.
1875 Jul. 23 to at least the end of April 1879
Samuel E. Jacobson, (aka Semmy E. Jacobson) partnered to Henry A. Doerr at 63 Commerce Street, San Antonio
1878 Feb. 10
Widow, Mrs. Mary E. Pallais, opened “Mrs. M. E. Pallais Variety Store” in San Antonio on 221-223 E. Postoffice St., Galveston, TX
1880 Dec. 1 to 1881 Jan. 1
Mrs. Pallais added to her business at 221-223 E. Post Office St., Galveston a photographic studio -- Frederick W. Bartlett photographer
1881 Jan to Mar 21
Mrs. Pallais photographic studio was closed due to a lack of a photographer.
1881 Mar 21 to 1883 Mar 20
Mrs. Pallais’ “New Art and Photograph Gallery” re-opened on March 21 at 221-223 E. Postoffice St. Galveston -- S. E. Jacobson as photographer. He would remain the photographer until the business was closed.



-----continued on next row---

<1881 Sept. 8
Samuel and Mary are married and business was changed to “S. E. Jacobson.” It was advertised that “S. E. Jacobson” would be selling out in Nov. of 1881 but the business did not sell until March 20, 1883 to J. H. Flett.
1884
Galveston city directory has S. E. Jacobson as having a photographic studio over 221 E. Postoffice St.
1886
During 1886 the Jacobsons relocated to San Antonio.

1887–1892
“M. E. Jacobson” photography business was open in San Antonio with the studio at 2 E. Houston Street. Sammy and Mary Jacobson are both in the business though he is the one mentioned in all the articles and advertisements. Mary’s name is on the business and she is listed as a photographer. Several advertisements and articles refer to “Herr M. E. Jacobson, as in Mr. M. E. Jacobson, using the male introduction and her initials. He is mentioned, but rarely by his own initials. The confusion as to her relationship to the business is the directories list her as “photographer” as that is the business she owns, not that she takes photographs. All the work is credited to him in the articles of the time.

1892 Feb. 21 – to at least May 1893
“Jacobson’s New Photographic Studio, 113 N. Alamo Plaza.” “(Mrs. S. E.) photographer over Hager, Moths and Breitling.” Semmy is listed at the same address.
1893 Dec. 18
The last mention of S. E. Jacobson in San Antonio in connection with photography, and Mary is not mentioned for some time before this.
1894 July 21 - 1894 July 21
“Jacobson & Raba Gallery” (S.E. Jacobson) Weimar, Texas. Ads appear starting June 30 for a “new photograph studio” run by “Jacobson and Raba opening July 21. Future ads make it clear it is S. E. Jacobson in the business and the assumption is that the partner is the later San Antonio photographer Ernst Wilhelm Raba, who would have to be only 20 years old at the time. On July 21 the business opened, but Raba is not mentioned after that. All future mentions of the business is just Jacobson.

1894 July 21 - 1895 Nov 30
S. E. Jacobson Weimar, Texas. Jacobson advertises he is closing the business on Nov. 30, with a listing of times he will be selling if they don’t sell before then.
After Nov. of 1895
I find no mention of either Jacobson in the photography business. I find nothing that shows what became of Samuel E. Jacboson.
1896-1901
Mary E. Jacobson was living alone in Galveston with her step brother, Frank D. Shaw.

Mary E. Shaw Pallais Jacobson
Born May 1830 Lampertheim, Kreis Bergstraße, Hessen, Germany
Died Oct. 29, 1909 (aged 79)

San Antonio (TX) Daily Express -
20 Jan 1880 San Antonio (TX) Daily Express -
23 Jul 1875
San Antonio (TX) Freie Presse -
23 Oct 1878
Galveston, TX, City Directory -
1881-1882 Galveston (TX) Daily News -
27 Nov 1881
Galveston, TX, City Directory
1882 Galveston (TX) Daily News -
31 Dec 1882
San Antonio (TX) Freie Presse -
01 Feb 1890 Weimar (TX) Mercury -
21 Jul 1894 Weimar (TX) Mercury -
14 Jul 1894
Weimar (TX) Mercury -
05 Jan 1895 Weimar (TX) Mercury -
19 Nov 1895
Weimar (TX) Mercury -
28 Mar 1896

Not the one you were looking for? Here's the photographer's INDEX by name. Listed here are all the Cabinet Card photographers of the 19th century found in LOST GALLERY. This is a work in progress. For a look at the original postings go to LOST GALLERY.

New examples and additional information are always welcome. Any additional information will help narrow the time that these precious antiques were made. All submissions should be free of glare and shadows. Do not crop. Leave a border around each card. The edges are sometimes an important clue to the age of the card.

Some examples on this page have been enhanced or restored for clarity and presentation here.

This page is free for educational and research purposes only but, as always, if the original owner of any of these examples objects to the use on this page, just let me know and they will be immediately removed.

Friday, August 27, 2021

Henry A Doerr

photographer: Doerr and Jacobson San Antonio, TX example from Heritage Auctions (finished between 1876 and 1879)

TEXAS PHOTOGRAPHER: Henry A Doerr
Assembled History by Kevin L. Mackey,
President Grace Armantrout Museum
For more information see: Museum Facebook Page

Reverse of CDV at left

DOERR, HENRY A.
SAN ANTONIO
1822-1885
By Kevin L. Mackey
1822
Heinrich "Henry" A. Doerr was born in Prussia (German State prior to the unification of Germany).
1850
A 1867 Mar 23, San Antonio Ledger article mentions Mr. Henry Doerr as “the first gentleman who took photographs in San Antonio, and has been engaged in this business over 17 years.” The first photographer’s advertisement in the newspapers I could find was 1851 lending credence to that statement.
1865 Aug 29
An article in the "San Antonio Tri-Weekly Herald" (Aug,. 29, 1865) noted him with a partner Engle stating the Engle and Doerr photographic gallery was near Mr. Zorks store on Commerce Street. On Nov. 11, 1865 the location was detailed as being “directly opposite Robinson’s auction house, one door south Masonic Building.” That partnership did not last long having dissolved before January of 1866.

1866
In January of 1866 he had a photographers license operating with Russian born Maximillian T. Jesse (June 9, 1842). Doerr is noted for making stereograph cards from this time until at least 1880. Their work bore the print, “Doerr & Jesse San Antonio.” After leaving Doerr, Jesse was a traveling photographer in Mexico c1878 before returning to San Antonio and partnered with N. Winther in a studio c1881.
1867 to 1870
His photography license showed him as alone.
1871, January
Doerr’s studios were located in "Maverick's New Building over Gambel's Store.”
1872 December to 1875
Doerr’s studio location was on Commerce St. but no specific address given.
1874
Doerr was in partnership with Nicholas Winther with the title of Doerr & Winther Studios, San Antonio.
1875 Jul. 23 to around 1879
Doer was partnered to Samuel E. Jacobson, (aka Sammy E. Jacobson) with studios as 63 Commerce Street, San Antonio, Texas.

1877
Doerr and Jacobson in San Antonio directory at 63 Commerce
1879
Doerr & Jacobson most likely dissolved in 1879 as San Antonio city directory had the entry for Doerr and Jacobson printed in the listing, but with a strike through through the name.
1880-1883
Doerr was again alone in the photography business and his studio was at 233 W. Commerce St. In 1881 he was listed as a Photographer in the San Antonio directory his Commerce St. business address but in 1883 he was listed as a “landscape artist” at his residence address, 421 Travis.
1884-1885
Doer was operating from his own home 421 Travis, at the corner of Avenue C and Travis Street where in 1885 the San Antonio city directory had him listed as a “beer saloon, landscape artist.”

1885 Oct 25
Henry A. Doerr passed away Oct. 22, 1885 in San Antonio and is buried in the Saint John’s Lutheran Cemetery New, San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas (Also known as Immanuel Lutheran Cemetery).

Henry married wife Bertha on Feb. 19, 1858 Fayette Co. Texas. She was born Feb, 1840 in Prussia and she died 1902 in San Antonio. Son Walter born c1867 in Texas and daughter Louisa c1872 in Texas. In the 1901 San Antonio city directory Bertha is shown as the widow of H. A. and living at 205 Upson with her son Walter who was a bookkeeper.

Partnerships with …
(?) Engle
Maximillan T. Jesse 1866
Nicholas Winther 1874
Samuel E. Jacobson 1876–1879

San Antonio (TX) Ledger - 23 Mar 1867 San Antonio (TX) Ledger - 23 Mar 1867
San Antonio (TX) Daily Express - 23 July 1875
photographer: Doerr
112th and Market St, Louisville, KY
Example from Portal to Texas History
(NOTE: This card is NOT by Henry A Doerr of San Antonio, TX. This is by J. Henry Doerr of Tennessee and Kentucky.)

Not the one you were looking for? Here's the photographer's INDEX by name. Listed here are all the Cabinet Card photographers of the 19th century found in LOST GALLERY. This is a work in progress. For a look at the original postings go to LOST GALLERY.

New examples and additional information are always welcome. Any additional information will help narrow the time that these precious antiques were made. All submissions should be free of glare and shadows. Do not crop. Leave a border around each card. The edges are sometimes an important clue to the age of the card.

Some examples on this page have been enhanced or restored for clarity and presentation here.

This page is free for educational and research purposes only but, as always, if the original owner of any of these examples objects to the use on this page, just let me know and they will be immediately removed.

Friday, August 13, 2021

Joseph Eckerskorn

photographer:J Eckerskorn
616 Alamo Street, San Antonio, TX
contributed by K Mackey
photographer:J Eckerskorn
616 Alamo Street, San Antonio, TX
contributed by K Mackey

Joseph Eckerskorn was a San Antonio photographer from 1894 to 1897 and a resident of the city of San Antonio from 1894 to about 1920 when he and his family returned to live out their rest of their lives in Germany from whence they came.

TEXAS PHOTOGRAPHER: Joseph Eckersdorn
Assembled History by Kevin L. Mackey,
President Grace Armantrout Museum

This is a guest posting.
For more information see:
Museum Facebook Page

PARENTS -- Peter Eckerskorn (a shoe maker) and wife Elisabeth Schäfer.
WIFE -- Married Emilie Zuber, widow of William Zuber, married in Galveston in August of 1893.
DAUGHTER was Emmi Eckerskorn


After completing his childhood schooling, he studied photography in Germany. 1893
Joseph emigrated to the United States, first via New York, then New Orleans and Galveston.
In Galveston he found employment with photographer Justus Zahn as a photo re-toucher.

He met, and soon married, Emelie (Emilie; Emile; Emillie; Emilia) Zuber, widow of William Zuber.

1893
Photo re-toucher for Justus Zahn in Galveston
1893 Aug 12
Licensed to marry Emelie Zuber reported in the Galveston Eve Tribune
1893 Aug 20
Home address 1601 Center St. Galveston according to help wanted ad in newspaper
1893 Oct 17
Three week visit to Chicago and St Louis with wife

1894 Jul 24
Galveston Daily News, Emelie executes Husband William Zuber’s estate
1894 Aug 26
San Antonio Southern Messenger J. Eckerskorn advert 616 S Alamo
1894
San Antonio city directory shows home address as 102 Lavaca and business as Photographer
1896 Jul 31
Photographers ad in San Antonio German language paper, “Freie Presse für Texas.”
1894-1896
Joseph primarily put advertisements in only, local, Catholic and German language newspapers.
1897
San Antonio city directory shows home address as 102 Lavaca and business as Photographer
1897
It seems he quit photography and went to other interests.
1897
Joseph Eckerskorn cofounded the "Katholische Rundschau," a German English weekly, Catholic newspaper with John Schoot. He would soon take it over completely, and publish it until 1919

1897
An ad appeared in the Catholic, San Antonio Southern Messenger showing him as an agent for selling ecclesiastical art
1899
San Antonio city directory shows home address as 415 Water and Business Manager of "Katholische Rundschau."
1902
San Antonio Southern Messenger noted local priest traveling in Germany met and traveled with Joe and wife “from San Antonio.”
1917
The available newspapers are silent about him until 1917 where they then noted a program he wrote was being performed.

c1919
The Eckerskorn family moved back to Germany where they would live out their lives. He would write over 100 books, as well as 60 plays and other things, with generally a Christian mission focus.
1921
San Antonio Southern Messenger noted Joe Eckerskorn and wife, “formerly of San Antonio” were living in Coblenz Germany.
1938, Jan 12
Joseph Eckerskorn dies in Koblenz, Germany at age 71

San Antonio (TX) Free Press - 31 Jul 1896
photographer: J Eckerskorn
San Antonio, TX
example from auction site
photographer: Zahn
418 Tremont St, Balveston, TX
example from Texsartisans.com
(Eckerskom worked as retoucher for Zahn)

Not the one you were looking for? Here's the photographer's INDEX by name. All the Cabinet Card photographers of the 19th century found in LOST GALLERY are listed there.

This is a work always in progress.

Aditional information and New examples are always welcome. Any additional information will help narrow the time that these precious antiques were made.

All submissions should be free of glare and shadows.
Do not crop.
Leave a border around each card. The edges are sometimes an important clue to the age of the card.

Email to the address found in the profile at the bottom of this page.

Some examples on this page have been enhanced or restored for clarity and presentation here.

This page is free for educational and research purposes only but, as always, if the original owner of any of these examples objects to the use on this page, just let me know and they will be immediately removed.

Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Alonzo Newell Callaway

photographer: A N Callaway
San Antonio, TX

TEXAS PHOTOGRAPHER: A. N. CALLAWAY, Sr
Assembled History by Kevin L. Mackey,
President Grace Armantrout Museum
For more information see: Museum Facebook Page

Reverse of card at left

Alonzo Newell Callaway, Sr.
Find-A-Grave # 64381844
Born -- Jan. 25, 1847 Montgomery, Alabama
Died -- Nov. 1 1920 (aged 73) Tyler, Smith Co. Texas
Buried -- Oakwood Cemetery Tyler, Smith Co., Texas
Mrd 1877 to Mary L Thompson (1856–1936)

Find-A-Grave # 64381875
FATHER - William J. Callaway (1817-1851)
Born Nov. 25, 1817 Georgia
Died Sep. 9, 1851 Choctaw, AL

Find-A-Grave # 108556150
Mrd Jan. 27, 1837 Wilcox Co. AL
MOTHER - Mary Scott (1819-1885)
Born 1819 Alabama (Louisiana on ANC’s Death Cert.)
Died 1885 Washington, TX

Find-A-Grave # ?
CHILD -
Dr. Alonzo Newell Callaway, Jr. MD (1876–1939)
Born 22 Sept. 1876 Columbus, Colorado, Tex
Died 29 Nov. 1939

Find-A-Grave # 64381861
Mrd Sallie Sarah Julia Goodman (1878–1960)

Find-A-Grave # 64441104
1850 - Choctaw, AL
1860 - De Soto LA

ALONZO NEWELL CALLAWAY
TIME LINE
1872 Oct. 26 -1873 Jan 18
-- Clarksville, Red River Co.
1874
Waller Co. Tx Occupation Tax Records
1875
Austin Co. Tx Occupation Tax Records
1875-1877 March -- Columbus, Colorado Co., Texas
1877 March -1882 March 15
-- Brenham, TX
1877
Initially N. E. Corner Public Square
1881 Jan 6
-- Brenham moved to Corner of Main & St Charles Dwyer building ad ran weekly
? -1883 Dec
-- Denison
1883 Dec -1901 Dec. 12
-- 413 & 415 E Houston, San Antonio, TX

1902 - 1904
-- Waco “Formerly of San Antonio”
1904 - ?
-- Tyler 105-1/2 W. Ferguson; 729 N. Broadway
1908
-- Temple Temple Daily Telegram Mrs
1910
-- in Beaumont - Census lists as photographer & newspaper says Jr to visit parents in Beaumont
1911 Apr. 11 - 1912 May 31
-- Marshall NE Corner of Square 1914 - ?
-- Temple - District Jury List
1920 Jan
-- Census - In Crocket City, Houston Co., Texas listed as Photographer
1920 Nov. 1
-- Tyler Daily Courier Times - A.N. Calloway died
1901 Dec. 31
Granted a patent # 690,131 for a photographic printing frame

ALONZO NEWELL CALLAWAY
A. N. Callaway, of Tyler, was born in Sumpter county, Ala., January 25th, 1847. Enlisted when a mere boy, the 5th of April, 1864, in Co. C. 8th Louisiana cavalry, and participated in the battle of Mansfield and the skirmishes that led up to that successful fight of Gen. Dick Taylor.

Young Callaway served with his command to the end of the war. His excellent work as artist and photographer in Tyler has gained him a reputation not confined to Texas. His wife is a native of Mississippi, being the daughter of Capt. W. B. Thompson, who commanded a company from that state during the war. His father, Wm. Janes Callaway, was a native of Georgia, a physician and a noted Baptist Minister.

[Source: Texans Who Wore the Gray, Volume I, by Sid S. Johnson; Transcribed by Sharon Witt] For more information see: Museum Facebook Page

18 Jan 1873 Brenham Weekly Banner
- 14 May 1878
Brenham Weekly Banner -
28 Jun 1878 Brenham Weekly Banner -
06 Jan 1881
Brenham Weekly Banner -
10 Mar 1881 Brenham Weekly Banner -
30 Mar 1882
Brenham Weekly Banner -
06 Apr 1882 Brenham Weekly Banner -
12 Mar 1882
San Antonio Light -
18 Dec 1883 San Antonio Light -
15 Feb 1884 San Antonio Light -
03 Mar 1884 and many other times Brenham Daily Banner -
27 Mar 1890
Del Rio Record -
05 Apr 1890 Del Rio Daily Record -
30 Jan 1892
San Antonio Daily News -
28 Mar 1882 San Antonio Freie Presse -
17 Jul 1897 San Antonio Southern Messenger -
12 Dec 1901
Patent - 21 Dec 1901 San Antonio -
10 Jan 1902
Marshall TX Messenger -
10 Apr 1911 Marshall TX Messenger -
06 May 1911 Marshall TX Messenger -
29 Sep 1911
Marshal Messenger -
01 May 1911 Marshal Messenger -
09 Sep 1911

The following Alonzo Newell Callaway timeline was formed using city directory listings, newspaper items, tax rolls and items from the book, Catching Shadows by David Haynes. The spelling of his name was mostly “Callaway” but occasionally “Calloway” or “Calaway”. (Note that sources do not always agree exactly and some listings here show only where Callaway was NOT located)

1847 Jan 25
Montgomery, AL, Alonzo N Callaway is born to William Callaway and Mary Elizabeth Scott
1864 Apr 05
State records, A N Callaway enlists in confederate army
1870 Jul 08
Clarksville, TX, US census, A N Callaway is NOT listed; (line by line search)
1873 Jan 18
Clarksville (TX) Times newspaper ad; Antonio Callaway, photography and frames
1874
Waller County, Tax roll, A N Callaway listed 1876
Colorado County Tax roll; A N Calaway listed

1876 Nov 09
Columbus (Colorado County) TX , Colorado Citizen newspaper; from Catching Shadows, becomes sole proprietor of studio formerly Callaway and Peterson
1877 Spring
Catching shadows, Callaway sells out to Peterson
1878 May and June
Benham (TX) Newspaper ads says A N Callaway uses “Lightning Process”
1881 Jan 06
Brenham (TX) Weekly Banner item says A N Calloway has moved to Dwyer Building and the corner of Main and St Charles (Repeated in March)
1881 Mar 10
Brenham (TX) Weekly Banner item says A N Calloway has moved to the Dwyer Building at the corner of Main and St Charles sts
1882 Mar 30
Brenham (TX) Weekly Banner ad says A N Callaway is working with J F Sprain in photography
1882 Apr 06
Brenham (TX) Weekly Banner ad says J S Sprain is successor to A N Callaway

1882 May 23
Brenham (TX) Weekly Banner ad says J S Sprain has bought out Callaway
1878-1883
Brenham, TX, Catching Shadows; as photographer, operated a studio
1883 Dec 18
San Antonio (TX) Light newspaper item says J W Clary, photographer, has sold to A N Callaway of Denison, TX
1883
San Antonio, TX, city directory A N Callaway NOT listed
1883
Burnet County, TX, Tax Role, A N Callaway listed
1884 Feb 14 and 7 more times
San Antonio (TX) Light, small ad says A N Callaway is at 413 and 415 E Houston St
1884 Mar 03 and many times in April and May
San Antonio (TX) Light, small ad for Callaway at 413 Houston, St
1885
San Antonio, TX, city directory, Alonzo N Callaway as photographer at 413 Houston; res 217 sixth
1887
San Antonio, TX, city directory, Alonzo N Callaway as photographer at 413 E Houston; res ws Davis bt Grayson Carson

1889
Bexar County Tax roll, A N Callaway listed
1890 Mar 27
Brenham (TX) Daily Banner, item says A N Callaway visited Brenham from San Antonio
1891
San Antonio, TX, city directory, Alonzo N Callaway as photographer at 413 E Houston; res 1903 Pine
1892
San Antonio, TX, city directory, Alonzo N Callaway as photographer at 511 E Houston; res 1717 N Pine
1893 and 1894
Bexar County Tax roll, A N Callaway Listed
1885 – 1892
San Antonio, TX, Catching Shadows; as photographer, operated studio at 413 E Houston
1890 Apr 05
Del Rio (TX) Record, small ad says A N Callaway is photographer at 413 E Houston in San Antonio
1892 Jan 30
Del Rio (TX) Record, small ad says A N Callaway is photographer at 413 E Houston in San Antonio
1895
San Antonio, TX, city directory, A N Callaway as photographer at 511 ½ E Houston; res Alamo Heights

1892 – 1896
San Antonio, TX, Catching Shadows; as photographer, operated studio at 511 ½ E Houston
1892 Mar 28
Galveston (TX) Daily News, item tells of loss by fire to the A N Calloway Studio
1896 – 1897
San Antonio, TX, Catching Shadows; as photographer at 513-515 E Houston St
1897 Jul 17
San Antonio (TX) Freie Presse Fur Texas small ad says A N Callaway is at 513 E Houston
1897
San Antonio, TX, city directory, A N Callaway as photographer at 511 ½ E Houston; res 829 Ave C
1897 – 1900
San Antonio, TX, Catching Shadows; as photographer, operated studio at 511 ½ E Houston St
1899
San Antonio, TX, city directory A N Callaway as photographer at 511 ½ E Houston; res 205 seventh; note that son A N Callaway Jr is listed as retoucher at same address

1900
Catching Shadows; Crockett, TX, briefly possibly; NOT in Waco, TX city directory
1901
San Antonio, TX, city directory, A N Callaway as photographer at 511 ½ E Houston; res 205 Seventh
1901 Dec 12
San Antonio (TX) Southern Messenger small as says L T Powell is successor to A N Callaway at 513-515 E Houston St, Mr Callaway will remain for a short time
1901 Dec 31
A N Callaway patents his Photographic Printing Frame
1902 Jan
St Louis and Canadian Photography : "L. T. Powell has sold his studio at Beeville, Tex., to Miss Jennie Rust, and has purchased the Callaway studio at San Antonio." The same issue reported that Callaway had obtained a patent for a photographic printing frame.
1902 Jan 03
San Antonio(TX) Southern Messenger small item showing L T Powell is succeeding A N Calloway at 513-515 Houston

1902
Waco, TX, city directory Alonzo Callaway as photographer at 414 ½ Austin; res same
1903
San Antonio, TX, city directory, A N Callaway NOT listed
1904
Waco, TX, city directory, Alonzo Callaway studio at 414 ½ Austin, Manager W B Thompson
1906
Waco, TX, city directory, Alonzo Callaway NOT listed
1906
Beaumont, TX, city directory, Alonzo Callaway NOT listed
1909
Beaumont, TX, city directory, Alonso Callaway NOT listed
1910
Beaumont, TX, city directory Alonzo Callaway as photographer at 9-10 Gordon Bldg, 555 ½ Pearl; res same
1911 Apr 10
Marshal (TX) Messenger, paragraph greeting Calloway as new photographer (sp)

1911 Apr 11 through Sep 01
Marshall (TX) Messenger small ad runs many times for Callaway at Northeast Corner of square, Marshall, TX
1911 Apr 12 through Oct 02
Marshall (TX) Messenger, small ad runs many times for Callaway in Marshall, no address
1911 Apr 17
Marshal (TX) Messenger small item says Mrs Callaway of Tyler has joined Mr Callaway to make Marshall, TX, their home
1911 May 01
Marshall (TX) Messenger, small promo item says Callaway is now open business in Marshall
1911 Sep 09
Marshall (TX) Messenger small ad says photographer Callaway is at east side of square
1912
Marshall, TX, city directory, Alonzo Callaway as photographer at 106 N Bolivar; res 506 E Austin
1913
Tyler, TX, city directory, Alonzo Callaway SR NOT listed; Alonzo Callaway Jr listed as Physician at 215 College

1916
Terrell, TX, Death Certificate; Terrell is where Callaway was first diagnosed with a heart disease
1920 Jan 08
Crockett, TX, US census, Alonzo Callaway as photographer on Church Street (No city directory available)
1920 Nov 01
Tyler, TX, A N Callaway dies at age 73 of heart failure (No obituary has been located so far)

Not the one you were looking for? Here's the photographer's INDEX by name. Listed here are all the Cabinet Card photographers of the 19th century found in LOST GALLERY. This is a work in progress. For a look at the original postings go to LOST GALLERY.

Examples and information are always welcome. If you have an example of this photographer's work, send a scan, including the edges, no cropping, to the address found in the profile link at the bottom of the page.

Some examples on this page have been enhanced or restored for clarity and presentation here.

This page is free for educational and research purposes only but, as always, if the original owner of any of these examples objects to the use on this page, they will be immediately removed.

Old stuff here...

About Me

My photo
I am 4' 3", eat small insects, dress in the dark and take annual showers. phase65@yahoo.com