
Donald C. & Elizabeth
M. Dickinson Research Center
Links to Exhibit Images
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"Rough Rider" Cowboys
Saluting President McKinley--Reception at Los Angeles, Cal., 1901.
Underwood & Underwood
2005.010 |
| The 30 images in this virtual
exhibit were created from stereographs in the collection of the National
Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum’s Donald C. & Elizabeth
M. Dickinson Research Center. The original stereo photographs were
manipulated using the Adobe Photoshop program to create anaglyphs,
images that, when seen with red/blue “3-D” glasses, allow
the viewer to see the photographs as three-dimensional. |
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The original stereo photographs, affixed
to a stiff backing 7 inches wide and 3½ to 4½ inches
high, are seen as three-dimensional when viewed with a stereo viewer.
Stereograph images are typically black & white or sepia in color,
not the red/blue coloring of the anaglyphs in the exhibit. Viewmaster
reels and viewers, which are still made today, are based on the same
principle. However, Viewmaster images differ because they are transparent,
in full color, and much smaller than the images used with a stereograph
viewer. |
| Stereographs are NOT two identical
images printed side-by-side. A special stereographic camera has two
lenses with the center of the lenses placed approximately 2½
inches apart (the distance between the eyes of a typical adult) that
takes two simultaneous photographs. When the printed photographs were
placed on a stereograph card with the center of the images the same
distance apart, the three-dimensionality of the original scene is
recreated when seen through a stereo viewer. |
| Brief History of Stereographs |
| The earliest stereographs were daguerreotypes,
photographic images recorded on sensitized sheets of silver-plated
copper. These were not ideal for stereoscopic use because each image
was unique with no possibility of reproduction and the shiny surface
was difficult to view. As various metal-, glass-, and paper-based
photographic printing processes were developed, they were adapted
to stereographic use with varying degrees of success. Paper-based
photographic printing was first used in 1852 and was by far the dominant
method for producing stereographs. |
| Stereoscopic viewers also went through
an evolution, beginning in 1850 with Sir William Brewster’s
invention of the lenticular stereoscope. This tabletop device was
a closed box, which could be opened on the sides to admit light, with
two adjustable lenses. Other inventions included viewers that could
hold up to 200 stereographs on an endless belt, similar to CD and
DVD jukeboxes in use today. Oliver Wendell Holmes invented the familiar
handheld stereoscopic viewer; it was marketed and improved by his
friend Joseph L. Bates. Holmes did much to encourage the popularity
of stereographs, writing two enthusiastic essays on the subject for
Atlantic Monthly, noting especially their educational possibilities.
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| The London Stereoscopic Company was one of
the earliest mass-producers of stereographs, and by 1858 had amassed
a list of more than 100,000 titles. Although there were other American
manufacturers, the primary United States mass-producers were Underwood
& Underwood, Keystone View Company, and H. C. White. These companies
would have more than 10,000 titles in print at any given time. At
the turn of the 20th century, the mass-producers were selling the
cards at the rate of six for one dollar when purchased in lots of
a dozen or more at a time. Examples of Underwood & Underwood and
Keystone cards are featured in this virtual exhibit. In keeping with
the educational function promoted by stereograph manufacturers, some
mass-produced cards featured text on the reverse that provided background
or commentary about the scene depicted. The text can also provide
interesting insights into the prejudices and concerns of the era in
which they were written. |
| The London Stereoscopic Company was one of
the earliest mass-producers of stereographs, and by 1858 had amassed
a list of more than 100,000 titles. Although there were other American
manufacturers, the primary United States mass-producers were Underwood
& Underwood, Keystone View Company, and H. C. White. These companies
would have more than 10,000 titles in print at any given time. At
the turn of the 20th century, the mass-producers were selling the
cards at the rate of six for one dollar when purchased in lots of
a dozen or more at a time. Examples of Underwood & Underwood and
Keystone cards are featured in this virtual exhibit. In keeping with
the educational function promoted by stereograph manufacturers, some
mass-produced cards featured text on the reverse that provided background
or commentary about the scene depicted. The text can also provide
interesting insights into the prejudices and concerns of the era in
which they were written. |
| In the early 1880s, the half tone or lithographic
printing process became commercially viable, and this allowed stereographic
images, many of which were originally published in true photographic
editions, to be printed very inexpensively. These half tone stereographs,
both multicolored and monochromatic, were produced to be sold very
inexpensively, sometimes as little as three-cents per card. Sears
Roebuck Company and Montgomery Ward Company both sold inexpensive
lithographic stereo cards to mail order customers. |
| Smaller companies and individual photographers
in Europe and the United States also got into the stereograph business.
Local stereographic publishers were generally one of four types: stereographic
specialists who focused on local subjects, resort photographers that
limited their work to the tourist trade, studio photographers who
produced stereographs as a sideline, and opportunists who produced
a few views of an unusual event like a train wreck to be sold as souvenirs
and then often resold the negative to a large-volume publisher. The
card stock, label, and imprint used differed between publishers and
this allows an individual card to be related to others produced by
the same publisher. |
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Thematic series and boxed sets were another way
stereographs were sold. For example, series documenting World War
I, the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition, and exotic travel destinations
such as Japan and the Middle East were popular with stereo card purchasers.
The Dickinson Research Center owns a boxed set of 100 multicolored
lithographic stereographs called the “Sportsman’s Series,”
probably originally sold by the Montgomery Ward Company. This series
includes a variety of hunting and fishing views, but also, unaccountably,
a number of American Indian scenes. |
| Stereographs were widely popular in the late 19th
century and early 20th century. Although one of the primary selling
points was always their educational content, perhaps the best way
to think about stereographs is as the television or DVD of their era.
In a time when few people traveled for pleasure, one of the main reasons
people collected stereographs was to serve as a relatively inexpensive
way to “travel” without ever leaving home. Other stereo
card collectors might focus on images of trains, animals, or lighthouses,
similar to the way someone today might collect science fiction or
western films on DVD. |
| After 1920, the Keystone View Company was the only
major stereograph publisher left in the world. As other companies
ceased production Keystone would purchase their negatives and would
sometimes issue them under their own name. For example, both Underwood
& Underwood and Keystone issued some of the same views. Keystone
ceased regular production in 1939, but continued to manufacture views
for the optometric trade. Individual cards could still be ordered
from Keystone as late as 1970. |
| Daguerreotypists were active in Texas and California
in the early 1850s, but San Francisco photographer C. E. Watkins probably
created the first Western stereographs when he took more than a 1000
views of Yosemite and the giant sequoias sometime before 1865. Some
of the major Western regional photographers who also took stereo views
included Watkins and Thomas Houseworth of California, Charles W. Carter
and Charles R. Savage of Utah, and Charles Weitfle of Colorado. This
exhibit includes a Charles Savage stereograph of a Ute family. Other
major sources of stereographs of the western United States and its
peoples included photographers for government survey expeditions and
railroads. The exhibit includes examples of both. John K. Hillers’
stereograph “Chu-ar-ru-um-peak Shooting a Rabbit” was
taken on the John Wesley Powell’s Survey of the Colorado River,
and Northern Pacific Railroad photographer F. Jay Haynes shot the
stereograph “One Days Hunt in Dakota.” Mass-producers
Underwood & Underwood and the Keystone View Company were also
major players in the production of Western-themed stereographs. |
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Sources
Darrah, William C. Stereo Views: A History of Stereographs in America
and Their Collection. Gettysburg, Penn.: Times and News Publishing
Co., 1964.
Darrah, William C. The World of Stereographs. Gettysburg, Penn.:
W. C. Darrah, 1977.
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Many people have a set of anaglyphic (red/blue)
3D glasses around the house, perhaps left over from attending a
3D film. To purchase 3D glasses to view this or other 3D content,
simply search for “3d glasses” on Google or another
search engine to find a wide variety of dealers that sell inexpensive
anaglyphic 3D glasses. To make 3D glasses at home, check out this
page at the United States Geological Service website: terraweb.wr.usgs.gov/TRS/kids/glasses.html.
To make anaglyphic stereographs at home using Adobe Photoshop, check
out the easy to understand instructions at: http://www.photoworkshop.com/double_exposure/publish/MakingAnAnaglyph3DImageGIA.shtml.
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| This exhibit can be viewed in
two ways. Persons interested in seeing a variety of different stereographs
can view the exhibit in a single sequence of 30 images. Those who
are interested in exploring a particular aspect of Western-themed
stereography can view a series of five images in one of six thematic
areas: Cowboys, Frontier Military, Hunting, Native Americans, Wild
West Shows and Rodeo, and Potpourri. The thematic areas should be
self-explanatory except for Potpourri, which includes images too diverse
to classify. One of these images, taken in the Armour meat packing
plant, is not strictly speaking “Western,” but the three-dimensional
effect is so striking it was included in the exhibit. To illustrate
the variety in the appearance of stereographic cards, an image of
the original card is included with each anaglyphic photograph. |
| Entire Exhibit in Sequence |
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