Cutting on the 49th Parallel, on the Right Bank of the Mooyie River Looking West
Photograph
c.1860 (photographed)
c.1860 (photographed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
In 1856 the War Department appointed the South Kensington Museum photographer Charles Thurston Thompson to teach photography to the Royal Engineers. On one expedition these soldier-photographers documented the border between the USA and Canada. From the crest of the Rockies westwards along the 49th Parallel to the coast, they painstakingly recorded everything that crossed their path, producing 'one of the earliest significant bodies of photographs made in the Pacific Northwest'.
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Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Cutting on the 49th Parallel, on the Right Bank of the Mooyie River Looking West (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Albumen print from wet collodion-on-glass negative |
Brief description | Photograph by Royal Engineers, 'Cutting on the 49th Parallel, on the Right Bank of the Mooyie River Looking West', c.1860, albumen print |
Physical description | Photograph of a group of men posed at the end of a line cut through a forested area. There is a forest covered mountain in the background. |
Dimensions |
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Credit line | Received from the Foreign Office 1863 |
Production | Photographed by a Royal Engineers photographer on a U.S.-Canada Border Survey. |
Subject depicted | |
Summary | In 1856 the War Department appointed the South Kensington Museum photographer Charles Thurston Thompson to teach photography to the Royal Engineers. On one expedition these soldier-photographers documented the border between the USA and Canada. From the crest of the Rockies westwards along the 49th Parallel to the coast, they painstakingly recorded everything that crossed their path, producing 'one of the earliest significant bodies of photographs made in the Pacific Northwest'. |
Collection | |
Accession number | 40090 |
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Record created | October 17, 2008 |
Record URL |
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