If vintage photographs don’t allow us to actually experience the past, they at least let us have a glimpse of it. Some of the rarest antique photos are the panoramas which required special cameras to make them.
There have been many different types of panoramic cameras with different capabilities. The images I like the best were made by the cameras that could take a 360 degree photo. A full circle.
We are extremely fortunate to have in our collection the panoramic photo featured in this post. It is a full 360 degree view of the intersection of Sutton and Hazel taken in 1930. Parts of it will be familiar to the regular viewers of this blog as I have cropped it as needed to illustrate different posts.
We are in debt to the generosity of Mary Harper Hall, descendant of the Harper’s Pharmacy folks, who gave us the print that now is in the collection of the Maplewood Public Library.
The print is 4 inches high by 41 inches long. It is what is known as a contact print and is the exact size as the film that it was made from. Long ago I saw this same print as well as another by the photographer whose name I have now forgotten in the Carondelet Historical Society’s collection in their building on Michigan. So if anyone reading this should find their way down there, take a picture of them both and get that photographer’s name, will ya’?
As you might expect this is not the best forum to view a photograph 41 inches long. I have chopped it up with enough overlap that hopefully the viewer will be able to get a pretty good idea of what this looks like. If not let me know and I’ll email you a higher resolution version.
9 COMMENTS
Hey Doug, my friends, the Brunks, owned the first house on Maple shown in your picture of the Loop. Any idea of when that picture was taken?
Fascinating.
It is so great that these paper prints from 80 or so years ago, are still so beautifully preserved.
I wonder if the digital images we create now will still be readable in 80 years.
Thanks you Doug for all these great posts.
Hi, Doug — the second house east of Sutton, south side of Maple, was 7394. The Kennedy family lived there a few years prior to purchasing 7320 Vine. You mentioned the fire pit near the ‘Barbecue’ business on Sutton — 7394 Maple had a trash pit behind the house, and a small Maple tree my brothers and I used to climb. The Mosier family lived in the house just west of us, and Mr. Ratz lived just east of us — Mr. Ratz’s house still stands. And absolutely, Harpers was a wonderful photo shop. I would imagine that photographer was doing exactly what you said — ‘showing off’ some new-fangled 1930’s camera.
Wanda, how cool that a house your family lived in is in this photograph. Good clear image of it too. And thanks for adding the other interesting details. I truly appreciate all the reader’s comments.
Hey Doug, my friends, the Brunks, owned the first house on Maple shown in your picture of the Loop. Any idea of when that picture was taken?
Where Krodingers is now used to be a diner. I remember going there to play the pinball machine.
Excellent article! Love these jaunts through our historic roots. This isn’t just about maplewood, it’s the history of America. Thanks for sharing!
You’re right. It is about the history of America. I hadn’t thought of it that way. I appreciate your insight.
Thank you Doug, these are wonderful images of our “past”
Fascinating.
It is so great that these paper prints from 80 or so years ago, are still so beautifully preserved.
I wonder if the digital images we create now will still be readable in 80 years.
Thanks you Doug for all these great posts.
Thanks, Doug.
Hi, Doug — the second house east of Sutton, south side of Maple, was 7394. The Kennedy family lived there a few years prior to purchasing 7320 Vine. You mentioned the fire pit near the ‘Barbecue’ business on Sutton — 7394 Maple had a trash pit behind the house, and a small Maple tree my brothers and I used to climb. The Mosier family lived in the house just west of us, and Mr. Ratz lived just east of us — Mr. Ratz’s house still stands. And absolutely, Harpers was a wonderful photo shop. I would imagine that photographer was doing exactly what you said — ‘showing off’ some new-fangled 1930’s camera.
Wanda, how cool that a house your family lived in is in this photograph. Good clear image of it too. And thanks for adding the other interesting details. I truly appreciate all the reader’s comments.