Decoding a Photograph
The first time I viewed this cabinet card, which is part of our Photographic Views collection, I immediately recognized the old Jordan Marsh building in Downtown Crossing and thought, "Wow! They really decorated Jordan Marsh up right for the 4th of July." Perhaps drawn first to the flag atop the building, my mind's eye assumed that the bunting in this black and white image was in fact red, white, and blue.
Looking more closely, I noticed the large image of a man in the panel directly over the awning and thought perhaps my initial instincts were wrong. Intrigued I turned the card over and read the brief handwritten description:
Jordan Marsh building, Washington St., Boston. Photograph by N.R. Worden, probably in 1885, after the death of Ulysses S. Grant.
In fact what I was imagining to be red, white, and blue was indeed a black and white display of mourning. A look through a jeweler's loop showed that the four corners surrounding the portrait of Grant contained images of battle scenes, helping me confirm the portrait was indeed of Grant. It is likely that this photograph was taken at some point between Grant's death on 23 July 1885 and his funeral, held in New York City, on 8 August 1885.
Hive Home
Recent Posts
- This Week @MHS
- Founder to Founder
- "Great sights upon the water...": unexplained phenomena in early Boston
- This Week @MHS
- Images of the 1925 bombing of Damascus
- “Light, airy, and genteel”: Abigail Adams on French Women
- This Week @MHS
- George Hyland’s Diary, January 1919
- New and Improved: The Tufts Family Logbooks
- This Week @MHS
- Upcoming Education Events
- The First Publication of Phillis Wheatley
- Christmas 1918
- A lovely day for a cup of Tea!
- This Week @MHS
Beehive Series
- Around MHS
- Around the Neighborhood
- Blog Info
- Civil War
- Collection Profiles
- Collections News
- Education Programs
- Exhibitions News
- From Our Collections
- From the Reading Room
- From the Reference Librarian
- MHS in the News
- On Loan
- Readers Relate
- Reading the Proceedings
- Recent Events
- Research Published
- Today @MHS
Archives
For questions, comments, and suggestions,
email the beekeeper
subscribe
Comments
Commenting has closed for this post. Thank you for participating.