DAGUERREOTYPE PHOTOGRAPHERS ~ SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS

FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES 
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American History, Brick Walls, Charts and Maps, Collections, Critical Analysis, Family Stories, Genealogical Writing, Research Methods and Tips. _______________________________________________________________
Booth, A.S.
Combs, F.
Duboce, Augustine P.
E. T. Cabanis
E. T. Cabanis
E. T. Cabanis
E. T. Cabanis
Ewing
Farnham, W.G.
Godkins, S.D.
Hill, Joseph
Marsh, William
Martin, D. (Mrs.)
Rivers, Thomas L.
Shepherd, Nicholas H.
Stewart, John G.
Taylor, John H.
Watson. (Josiah Proctor????)
William R. Williams
Wright, W.W.







Booth, A.S. Daguerreian, Springfield, Ill., 1857.
Combs, F. 
Duboce, Augustine P. Ambrotypist, Springfield, Ill., 1851-1860. In 1857-1858 he was listed on the west side of the Square, and lived at the corner of Jefferson and Third Streets. He advertised the Capitol Gallery, formerly Taylor's, and noted he had been in business six years in Springfield. He offered Sylphotypes, sold daguerreian stock and gave instruction in the art. In 1859 he was listed on the west side of Fifth Street between Adams and Washington Streets. In 1860 he was listed in partnership as Duboce and Wright (W.W.), on the west side of Public Square.
E. T. Cabanis 1848 Rooms over Barns & Beidler’s Store, Springfield, Illinois.
E. T. Cabanis E. T. Cabanis was recorded in the January 6, 1848 Illinois Journal (Springfield, Illinois.) Daguerreotype Miniatures. E. T. Cabanis wishes to inform the public that he has fitted up very comfortable rooms and is (Sundays excepted) taking likenesses in a manner that cannot fail to please all persons of taste. As he wishes to remain in Springfield, not intending to travel, he begs all lovers of the art, and all who would have elegant likenesses of themselves or friends, to give him at least a passing notice.
E. T. Cabanis N. B. Rooms over Barns & Beidler’s store, opposite the south entrance of the State House.
E. T. Cabanis E. T. Cabanis is not recorded in other photographic directories.
Ewing Listed as a daguerreian over the Post Office, Springfield, Ill. in 1855, in partnership as Ewing and Rivers.
Farnham, W.G. "Listed as a daguerreian on the west side of Fifth Street, between Washington and Adams Streets, Springfield, Ill., 1859. He boarded at the New England House. He advertised his rooms as the ""National Gallery""."
Godkins, S.D. "Active as a daguerreian in Springfield, Ill., 1857-1860. In 1857 he was listed without a business address. He boarded on the north side of Jefferson Street. In 1858-1859 he was listed with a ""fine art gallery"" on Fifth Street. In 1860 he was listed as a photographer."
Hill, Joseph Active as a photographer in Galesburg, Ill., 1860. In 1860, Hill traveled to Springfield, Ill. to take photographs of Abraham Lincoln after his nomination for President. Information from a Seattle, Wash. collector indicates this was the same Joseph Hill who ultimately settled in Yakima, Wash., and died there.
Marsh, William Advertised as photographs and ambrotypes on the west side of Public Square, Springfield, Ill., 1860. A quarter-plate ambrotype of Abraham Lincoln taken in 1860 is attributed to Marsh.
Martin, D. (Mrs.) Active as a daguerreotypist at 11 south side Public Square, Springfield, Ill., 1855.
Rivers, Thomas L. "He was first listed as a daguerreian in 1854-1855 in Jacksonville, Ill. This is probably the same ""Rivers"" listed as a daguerreian in Springfield, Ill., in 1855, over the Post Office, in partnership as Ewing and Rivers."
Shepherd, Nicholas H. Listed as a daguerreian in Springfield, Ill., 1845-1848. Prior to recent discoveries, he was credited with taking the earliest daguerreotype of Abraham Lincoln, in 1846.
Stewart, John G. Active as a daguerreian on the south side of Adams Street, between Fifth and Sixth Streets, Springfield, Ill., 1858-1859. He lived on Eighth Street.
Taylor, John H. Listed as a daguerreian in Springfield and Ogle Station, Ill. In 1855 he was listed in Springfield, at 13 West Side of Public Square, Post Office building. It was noted he had been there for some time. Probably the same J.H. Taylor listed as a daguerreian in Ogle Station in 1860.
Watson. (Josiah Proctor????) Listed as a daguerreian in Springfield, Ill., 1854-1855.
William R. Williams The National Gallery
Wright, W.W. Active as an ambrotypist on the west side of Public Square, Springfield, Ill., 1860, in partnership as Duboce (A.P.) and Wright.







https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Whitfield_Bunn_and_Jacob_Bunn





EAST
1859
Sangamon County Court House
State Bank of Illinois. later Springfield Fire Insirance Company
J. M. Burkhardt. Clothing
Cormeau and Diller  druggists
Wright an Brown. Dry goods and crockery 
Boran and Bacon. Books and stationary 
C. E. Matheny, Dry Goods
A. M. Converse. Groceries






















SOUTH



Cook Building


Little Building
     T. S. Little Clothing
     Preston Butler. Photographer
J. Bunn Building
     J. Bunn Grocery and coffee

1859


Cook Building


Little Building
     T. S. Little Clothing
     Preston Butler. Photographer
J. Bunn Building
     J. Bunn Grocery and coffee
I






SOUTH



WEST


EAST
Cook"s
Aetna Insuramce






EAST




1858 East
Sangamon County Courthouse




SOUTH
Tinsley Building 
     S. M. Tinsley Grocery No. 5
     Hurst Taylor. Grocery No. 2




Cook Building


Little Building
     T. S. Little Clothing
     Preston Butler. Photographer
J. Bunn Building
     J. Bunn Grocery and coffee











In Southeastern Illinois, on the rich, rolling prairie between the Wabash and Little Wabash rivers, stands the small, thriving city of Albion, seat of Edwards County. More than a hundred years ago Albion was well known in America and England as the center of a semi-utopian colony of British immigrant-farmers called English Prairie. The name of English Prairie has since disappeared but one of the original buildings of the colony remains in Albion, the Gibson Harris house. It is now held in veneration as that city's oldest residence.

Although this dwelling, made of brick and located half a block west of the Courthouse Square, was constructed at the time English Prairie was in its prime, it was not built for one of the English colonists, but for an American who had come west from his birthplace on the Atlantic seaboard. This man, Francis Dickson, was one of several hundred Americans who had joined the Englishmen in setting up the colony on the Illinois prairie. After this community was established, Robert Owen and his son came from Scotland and founded a similar and more famous colony across the Wabash River at New Harmony, Indiana.

The old brick house in Albion is believed to be that city's first brick dwelling. It has the further distinction of being owned and occupied by members of the same family, that of Gibson Harris, for more than one hundred and twenty years — an unusual record for Illinois.

The man for whom the brick house was built, Francis Dickson, had conducted a general store in his home. Here he sold supplies to the English colonists, many of whom had been sailors. Among his customers were the two men who had founded the colony, Morris Birkbeck and George Flower. Both of them liberals and idealists, as well as practical farmers, these two Englishmen wrote books and pamphlets about their settlement that made it widely known in the early nineteenth century.

One of the best-known of these books was Birkbeck's Letters from Illinois, published the same year the colony was founded, 1818 (which was the same year Illinois was admitted to statehood). He also wrote Notes on a Journey in America, which describe his trip from the Atlantic seaboard to Illinois. At the same time, George Flower penned many letters to English news­papers describing the colony. In later years he was to write an authoritative History of the English Settlement in Edwards County Illinois. William Cobbett visited English Prairie in the early years of its founding and described it in his Journal of a Year's Residence in America.

 p16 While Francis Dickson was tending his store at Albion, and English Prairie was flourishing, there lived at near-by Vincennes, Indiana, a young surveyor named Gibson Harris. A native of Litchfield County, Connecticut, where he was born in 1791, Harris had come West and secured employment making maps and plats of the country around Vincennes. While engaged in this work he helped plat Terre Haute. Soon after English Prairie was founded he crossed the Wabash and joined the other Americans who had associated themselves with the Englishmen.

Unable to secure work as a surveyor, young Harris found employment in Albion as a clerk in Francis Dickson's store. Several years later he married Elizabeth Woods, daughter of John Woods, cultured English-born hotelkeeper of Albion, whose book, Two Years' Residence in the Settlement on the English Prairie, the Illinois Country, was another of the published works which attracted attention to English Prairie and the great fertile lands of the newborn state of Illinois.

A few years after Gibson Harris bought the house and grocery store (1826) he erected a separate building for his store, this being located on his property just to the east of the brick house. Later, this store building was moved across the street and still stands. As with his predecessor in the store, Gibson Harris enjoyed the business and esteem of many of the colonists of English Prairie.

But there was one product Gibson Harris always refused to sell in his store, and that was liquor. An old history of Edwards County says of him: "In an early day he took strong grounds in favor of temperance, nor was it in words alone, but in action as well. It was the custom of the times to have liquor on sale in such establishments (general stores). This he would not do. Years afterward this was imputed to him as a virtue, though at the time his customers thought it a hardship."

After selling his house and store, Francis Dickson entered other fields. In his later life he lived at Louisville, Kentucky, where he was occupied as a bookkeeper. A brother of his, Dr. Henry L. Dickson, was a well-known physician in southern Illinois during the 1850's and 1860's.

Gibson Harris died in 1847 and the operation of the store was continued by his widow with the aid of three of her sons. Another son, Gibson, Jr., studied law at Springfield under Abraham Lincoln but afterward gave up law and went to Cincinnati where he became wealthy as a mattress manufacturer. It is said that he turned down an offer of a government post from President Lincoln, feeling that he was doing well enough in the mattress business.

The Harris house is a two‑storygable-roofed dwelling, its old brick walls painted a dull yellow. It is one of the few houses in Albion built  p17 flush against the sidewalk. Originally, the house contained only four rooms but it was enlarged and now contains nine. Most of the rooms were warmed by big fireplaces but these, with the exception of one, have beenº walled up.

Among numerous Harris family heirlooms and relics of early days that were handed down from generation to generation with the house were a set of blue china dishes brought over from England by the parents of Gibson Harris' wife, a corner whatnot, an old-fashioned walnut parlor organ, a four-poster bed, and a drop-leaf table.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Whitfield_Bunn_and_Jacob_Bunn











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