This is kind of a housekeeping post: the blog has gotten so big (over 9 years!) that I have lost track of what’s in it, so I’m going to gather together a few portfolios of images for ready reference. Today: some of my favorite Salem prints. I could spend hours going through every one of Frank Cousin’s photographs of Salem (especially now that so many have been digitized) but there’s something about prints that really captures the essence of a structure—or a street—so I’m always seeking them out. Below are some of my favorites: most from the nineteenth century, and most from books; some from the twentieth century and some “stand-alone” imprints. Some are from engravings; some from drawings. I think most have been featured in the blog before, but I’m not sure! In any case, they are all my go-to images when I want to conjur up a time and space in Salem’s history.
My favorite pre-restoration print of the House of the Seven Gables, 1889; prints by two women artists—Mary Jane Derby (North Salem) & Ellen Day Hale (Corner of Summer, Norman, and Chestnut Streets, where now we have a traffic circle!)–and pioneering lithography firms from the Boston Athenaeum’s Digital Collections.
These next images will seem familiar: they are from John Warner Barber’s Historical Collections of Massachusetts, which was first published in 1839. They have been reprinted many times, but my favorite version of them is in antiquarian George Francis Dow’s Old wood engravings, views and buildings in the county of Essex, a beautiful little volume published in 1908. Dow supplements Barber a bit with information and images he found in the Essex Institute, of course.
As you can see in the caption for the (Downing-)Bradstreet house above, Joseph Felt’s Annals of Salem, first published in 1844, is the source of some classic Salem printed images, as are the guidebooks published in the later nineteenth century and national publications like Gleason’s/Ballou’s Pictorial and Harper’s. Salem got a lot of press once Hawthorne started selling, and the national Centennial and Bicentennial of the Witch Trials in 1892 also focused attention on “Old” Salem. And another great source for graven images is of course ephemera: the front and back pages of the successive Salem Directories are full of imagery, and many invoices, billheads, and other business paper contain beautiful prints. Fortunately the Salem State Archives is digitizing whatever comes their way.
Prints of the James Emerton Pharmacy in the Phillips Library of the Peabody Essex Museum and the Salem Directory; Seccomb Oil Works billhead, Salem State Archives and Special Collections.
On the verge of the twentieth century, a lot of the classic images above were started to look a bit dated, so we get new versions of Salem’s most characteristic buildings and streets in periodicals and guidebooks like Moses Sweetser’s Here and There in New England and Canada, first published in 1899. Most architectural publications from this time and after used the photographs of Frank Cousins or (a bit later) Mary Harrod Northend for illustrations, with the notable exception of the measured and drawn renderings of “Colonial Work” contained in the Georgian Period portfolios. I can never get enough of these! More impressionistic, printed illustrations return in architectural books aimed at the general public in the mid-twentieth century: I particular like Ethel Fay Robinson’s Houses in America (1936, with drawings by her husband Thomas.
Illustrations of Salem architecture from Here and There in New England and Canada, The Georgian Period, and Houses in America.
January 6th, 2020 at 4:36 pm
About Conant’s House. We like to think that it was Thomas’ house until Roger came along. That was the first ‘peaceful’ transfer. As well, we added a page on Wikipedia about this house (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_House_(Cape_Ann)); plus, there is this blog post, albeit somewhat dated (done Sept of 2011): https://thomasgardnerofsalem.blogspot.com/2011/08/thomas-house.html.
There was a replica created by George Francis Dow which was motivated by activities related to the 300th. Lots to discuss. Too, there was a pageant: https://thomasgardnerofsalem.blogspot.com/2018/06/pageant-of-salem.html.
BTW, the Bradstreet House? That was Ann’s. She had Simon sign a prenup (first one in America) and left the house and property to a Gardner nephew.
January 6th, 2020 at 4:55 pm
Thanks! I did not know that about Anne! Definitely going to look into that.
January 6th, 2020 at 5:43 pm
In our Valentine issue of Gardner’s Beacon, we provided a few old cards plus got familiar with Ann and Joseph (wrote a few words about them and their house). There’s a lot more to the story.
https://thomasgardnersociety.org/html/Newsletters/PDFs/Vol%20II%20No%201.pdf
Looking forward to reading your take on the matter.
January 7th, 2020 at 11:36 am
Oh I see! I thought you meant Anne Bradstreet not the second Mrs. Bradstreet—now it makes sense!