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  • Immagine del venditore per [Photographs Showing Landscapes, Geological and Other Features of Portions of the Western Territory of the United States] venduto da Donald A. Heald Rare Books (ABAA)

    6 albumen photographs, each mounted on two-toned Wheeler Survey mount with letterpress imprints and titles. Scarce O'Sullivan and Bell photographs from the landmark Wheeler Surveys. A collection of six rare Wheeler Survey images featuring Colorado and Idaho from the 1874 season. These images therefore were not included in the 50 plate set of images from the 1871 and 1873 season, and so are not included in the Dover Publications work on that set published in 1983. The survey's main goal was to make topographic maps of the southwestern United States and the present series of images focuses on the landscapes of this region. The collection comprises the following subjects (with series identification numbers): 1) "Lake in Conejos Canon, Col." Not in Dover (IV:16). 2) "View Near Head of Conejos River, Col." Not in Dover (IV:17). 3) "Park Near Head Of Conejos Caņon, Col." Not in Dover (IV:18). 4) "'Lost' Lakes Near Miegs Peak, Col., Lakes 9,500 feet above sea-level." Not in Dover (IV:19). 5) "Alpine Lake, Cerro Blanco Mountains, Col. Height of Peak over 14,000 feet." Not in Dover (IV:20). 6) "Snake River Canon, Idaho. View from above Shoshone Falls." Not in Dover (IV:25). The Irish-born O'Sullivan's pioneering photographic work started during the American Civil War when he served as Matthew Brady's apprentice and then through his work in Alexander Gardener's studio. He afterwards became the official photographer on the United States Geological Exploration of the Fortieth Parallel under Clarence King from 1867-1869. In 1870 he joined a survey team in Panama to survey for a canal across the isthmus. He joined Lt.George M. Wheeler's survey west of the 100th meridian west from 1871-74, facing starvation on the Colorado River when some of the expedition's boats capsized. Only a small percentage of the 300 negatives he took survived the trip back East. He spent the last years of his short life in Washington, D.C., as official photographer for the U.S. Geological Survey and the Treasury Department. For his Wheeler Survey photographs, the English-born Bell used two cameras: an 11 x 8-inch camera for large prints, and an 8 x 5 inch for stereo cards. He employed both wet and dry collodion processes on this expedition. As a result, these photographs are characterized by dark foregrounds with elements becoming increasingly lighter in tone as distances increase. All of the photographs were taken during the series of expeditions known by the collective title of the "Geographical Surveys West of the 100th Meridian" (or more usually as the Wheeler Survey after its leader, Lieutenant George M. Wheeler). The photographs document the work and explorations of the survey, and include some of the earliest photographs taken of the Grand Canyon and of Indian tribes and sites in northern Arizona and New Mexico. A number of these images have achieved iconic status among the images of the early West. "The survey that produced the photographs.was led by George M. Wheeler, a native of Hopkinton, Massachusetts. Born in 1842, Wheeler began his [Army] career in topographical engineering in 1867.His early reconnaissance work in Nevada and Utah convinced him of the need for a new survey, comparable in scale to those of [Clarence] King, [Ferdinand Vandiveer] Hayden and [John Wesley] Powell.Wheeler's proposal met with a favorable reception in Washington" - GEORGE M. WHEELER'S PHOTOGRAPHIC SURVEY OF THE AMERICAN WEST, 1871-1873 (pp.v-vi). The survey took place over four seasons in 1871-1874. The photographer in 1871, 1873and 1874 was Timothy O'Sullivan, "born around 1840, probably in Ireland. Little is known of his early life on Staten Island, New York. As a teenager, he apprenticed himself to Mathew B. Brady, one of the outstanding American photographers of the nineteenth century.The expeditionary phase of O'Sullivan's professional life began in 1867 with the King survey 'and in 1870 he served as official photographer for an expedition to the Isthmus of Darien to map o.

  • Immagine del venditore per [Photographs Showing Landscapes, Geological and Other Features of Portions of the Western Territory of the United States] venduto da Donald A. Heald Rare Books (ABAA)

    9 albumen photographs, each mounted on two-toned Wheeler Survey mount with letterpress imprints and titles. Scarce O'Sullivan and Bell photographs from the landmark Wheeler Surveys. A collection of nine rare Wheeler Survey images, mostly featuring sites in Arizona. The survey's main goal was to make topographic maps of the southwestern United States and the present series of images focuses on the landscapes of this region. The collection contains images from each of the first three years of the Survey, and comprises the following subjects (with series identification numbers): 1) "Snow Peaks, Bull Run Mining District, Nevada 1871." Dover 1 (I:1). 2) "Caņon Of Kanab Wash, Colorado River, Looking South." Dover 1 (II:1). 3) "Grand Canon, Colorado River, Near Paria Creek, Looking West." Dover 23 (II:7, numbered 5 on photo). 4) "Apache Lake, Sierra Blanca Range, Arizona." Not on U.S. Army Corps Engineers mount. Dover 32 (III:1). 5) "View on Apache Lake, Sierra Blanca Range, Arizona." Dover 33 (III:2). 6) "View on Apache Lake, Sierra Blanca Range, Arizona, Two Apache Scouts in the Foreground." Dover 34 (III:3). 7) "North Fork Caņon, Sierra Blanca Creek, Arizona 1873." Dover 35 (III:4). 8) "Cooley's Park, Sierra Blanca Range, Arizona." Dover 36 (III:5). 9) "Distant View of Camp Apache, Arizona 1873." Dover 37 (III:6). The Irish-born O'Sullivan's pioneering photographic work started during the American Civil War when he served as Matthew Brady's apprentice and then through his work in Alexander Gardener's studio. He afterwards became the official photographer on the United States Geological Exploration of the Fortieth Parallel under Clarence King from 1867-1869. In 1870 he joined a survey team in Panama to survey for a canal across the isthmus. He joined Lt.George M. Wheeler's survey west of the 100th meridian west from 1871-74, facing starvation on the Colorado River when some of the expedition's boats capsized. Only a small percentage of the 300 negatives he took survived the trip back East. He spent the last years of his short life in Washington, D.C., as official photographer for the U.S. Geological Survey and the Treasury Department. For his Wheeler Survey photographs, the English-born Bell used two cameras: an 11 x 8-inch camera for large prints, and an 8 x 5 inch for stereo cards. He employed both wet and dry collodion processes on this expedition. As a result, these photographs are characterized by dark foregrounds with elements becoming increasingly lighter in tone as distances increase. All of the photographs were taken during the series of expeditions known by the collective title of the "Geographical Surveys West of the 100th Meridian" (or more usually as the Wheeler Survey after its leader, Lieutenant George M. Wheeler). The photographs document the work and explorations of the survey, and include some of the earliest photographs taken of the Grand Canyon and of Indian tribes and sites in northern Arizona and New Mexico. A number of these images have achieved iconic status among the images of the early West. "The survey that produced the photographs.was led by George M. Wheeler, a native of Hopkinton, Massachusetts. Born in 1842, Wheeler began his [Army] career in topographical engineering in 1867.His early reconnaissance work in Nevada and Utah convinced him of the need for a new survey, comparable in scale to those of [Clarence] King, [Ferdinand Vandiveer] Hayden and [John Wesley] Powell.Wheeler's proposal met with a favorable reception in Washington" - George M. Wheeler's Photographic Survey of the American West, 1871-1873 (pp.v-vi). The survey took place over three seasons in 1871, 1872, and 1873. The photographer in 1871 and 1873 was Timothy O'Sullivan, "born around 1840, probably in Ireland. Little is known of his early life on Staten Island, New York. As a teenager, he apprenticed himself to Mathew B. Brady, one of the outstanding American photographers of the nineteenth century.The expeditionary phase of O'Sullivan.