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$150.00
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Item Code: 1189-150
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This photograph measures approximately 5.5 inches by just under 4 inches and features a well-known view of General Archer, a Maryland born lawyer turned career soldier, famously captured on Day 1 at Gettysburg.
This photograph is a lesser-known photograph type called a silver print, where silver halide is suspended in a gelatin emulsion. This emulsion coats the base and then a chemical wash is poured over the paper exposing the image. This image was produced from the original negative by the Cook Studio in Richmond sometime after 1880.
The Cook studio was owned by George S. Cook whose two sons, George LaGrange Cook and Heustis Cook, also worked as photographers. The father, George S. Cook, is famously known for taking the first combat images of ironclads firing on Ft. Moultrie in 1863. George S. was born in 1819 in Connecticut and moved south to Louisiana in 1839. From there, he moved several times (always remaining in the South), making money as a merchant and studying photography until he eventually wound up in Richmond in 1880, where he bought Anderson’s photography studio. This is where many of the original glass plate negatives came from to reproduce his photographs. The Cook studio also purchased other collections of negatives as well.
This image is in good condition. Only the top left-hand corner has been folded. The bottom left-hand corner has a small chip taken out of it and there is another small piece flaking away. One small tear to the lefthand side right at Archer’s shoulder is present. There is also one small bend to the photograph near the top of Archer’s head.
The reverse shows dirt throughout. A pencil notation reads: “J.J. Archer Gen. 367.” There are four tape marks: one to each side of the photograph. [cla] [ph:L]
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