Posts Tagged ‘Bibliothèque de Toulouse’

Glaciers on a Human Scale

Posted by zyrcster in Across The Commons

The Commons Galleries – featuring Brenda Anderson’s curation

I like the scale of these shots…

Glacier de la Maladetta
Bibliothèque de Toulouse
big rivers of ice, with little people.

Grotto in Suphellebrae, Sognefjord, Norway
Library of Congress
I also love the fact that most of the people seem to be dressed in their “Sunday best”,

Crossing a glacier, Kosciusko
Powerhouse Museum
almost like a stroll on a glacier is just like a stroll downtown…

Francis Joseph Glacier, 1906
National Library of New Zealand
only it’s colder and one must carry a stick.

Eliot Glacier, deep crevasses of snow and ice on Mount Hood
Oregon State University Archives

View the full gallery here to leave your comments!

Recent Uploads to The Commons on Flickr

Posted by zyrcster in Recent Uploads
Celebrate autumn with a return to school! Gather up your textbooks and meet your teacher; the Nationaal Archief’s most recent set is a fun look at school days of yore. Doofstommen-onderwijs / Education for the deaf-and-dumb
Schooltijd / School days
The Swedish National Heritage Board offers new scans of ancient monuments. Here is the oldest rune stone in Uppland, from the 6th century A.D., and the only one with the elder rune alphabet. Rune stone, Krogsta, Uppland, Sweden
Ancient Monuments
Make sure to view their idyllic scenes of churches, too. Ingatorp Old Church, Småland, Sweden
Old churches
See marvelous castles in France, courtesy of the Bibliothèque de Toulouse. Entrée du donjon, Penne, octobre 1898
Château
The State Library and Archives of Florida adds to the Erickson Collection; this hot dog stand is true Americana. Lum's hot dog restaurant: Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Roy Erickson Collection:
Fort Lauderdale, the Famous and the Familiar,
1969-1981
See more vintage Americana from the other side of the states, courtesy of the Oregon State University Archives. Cheese canning process
Oregon Industries, circa 1940
Check out the The Great Reunion at Gettysburg, July 1913, through the Library of Congress’ Bain News Service photographs. Boy Scouts - Gettysburg
News from the 1910s

Recent Uploads to the Flickr Commons

Posted by zyrcster in Recent Uploads

What’s new in The Commons? Fish, jazz, bridges, caves, ships, stereopgraphs and (yay!) photochroms!

The Swedish National Heritage Board brings us a brand new set! These are remarkable photographs of ancient monuments, including rune stones from the 11th century AD and Neolithic dolmens and passage graves from about 3500 BC. Cave of Stora Förvar with Stone Age settlement, Stora Karlsö, Gotland, Sweden
Ancient monuments
See the Titanic sail away on its maiden voyage from Southampton, courtesy of the National Maritime Museum SS 'Titanic' leaving Southampton
PortCities London
Wow, the State Library and Archives of Florida goes all out with their celebrity images. Here’s Duke Ellington playing a local Ft.Lauderdal, FL. school. Jazz composer and bandleader Duke Ellington performing with his orchestra at the Pine Crest School: Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Roy Erickson Collection:
Fort Lauderdale, the Famous and the Familiar,
1969-1981
The Oregon State University Archives presents early 20th century industry in Oregon. See a whole lotta fish, too. Tug boat in dry dock
Oregon Industries, circa 1905-1910
Yes! 108 new photochroms from the Library of Congress. This time, we travel to Begium to view beachside and pastoral scenes. Milksellers, Brussels, Belgium
Photochrom Travel Views
View the wonderful Eugène Trutat’s images of Tarn, France, in the 1890s, from the Bibliothèque de Toulouse. Pont suspendu et église Saint-Michel, Gaillac, avril 1897
Tarn

Famille Crouzats, au Port de Venasque, Luchon, 6 septembre 1898

Posted by zyrcster in Best of The Commons
Famille Crouzats, au Port de Venasque, Luchon, 6 septembre 1898

Eugène Trutat
Famille Crouzats, au Port de Venasque, Luchon, 1898
Bibliothèque de Toulouse: TRU C 343

view + comment on Flickr

Wheelchairs Across the Commons

Posted by Penny in Across The Commons, Articles
When she was photographed here, Mrs. Field was using a wicker wheelchair, pushed by the main standing behind her, apparently to tour the Bronx Zoo.

Was Mrs. Field a wheelchair user?

Mrs. Field
Library of Congress
The answer isn’t obvious, because the zoo (like many zoos and other parks today) had wheelchairs for loan or rent.

Notice the same model lined up behind Mrs. Gibson in this photo.

Mrs. C.D. Gibson
Library of Congress
Was this a common choice for tourists a century ago? The Commons has some tantalizing evidence that it may have been.

Meet Madame Gardriol:

Mme Gardriol en chaise, Luchon, 9 juillet 1899
Bibliotheque de Toulouse
Another matron on holiday — this time, at a spa town in the Pyrenees. Her chair model is different, but again there’s a man pushing her and an umbrella handy for shade.

Two could be a coincidence … are there other telltale images in the Commons? Look at this one, from the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893:

World's Columbian Exposition: Electricity Building, Chicago, United States, 1893.
Brooklyn Museum

Flickr user Rob Ketcherside added a note marking the two people on the lower right of the photo, just below the pillars — that’s a man pushing a woman in a wicker wheelchair.

Wicker was, indeed, a common material for wheelchairs in everyday use, not just by tourists. Wicker wheelchairs are sometimes sold today as antiques (not hard to find online), and well into the 1930s wicker was considered a stylish, comfortable design element.

Walking in heeled shoes, in a corset, in heavy skirts and layers, balancing an impressive hat, as women of the era did, was no easy trick; for some, it was simply impossible to sustain for long periods. If Mrs. Field, Mme. Gardriol, and the Exposition-goer wanted to see the sights and dress like their peers, and they could afford to hire a chair, wheels were one realistic option.

Who are the men behind the chairs? These models are built to be pushed by a second person (not self-propelled). Were the men hired with the chairs? Or were they family, friends, longtime employees?

Whether or not these women were using the chairs as a temporary convenience or an everyday necessity, the spaces they traveled might reasonably have accommodated such conveyances, especially if the zoo, spa, or fair provided the chairs in the first place. How well? Were the pathways were smooth, the entrances to indoor exhibits wide, and the inclines gentle? If so, maybe the history of wheelchair accessibility in public spaces extends further back than the familiar symbols and features of recent decades.

And that was July … across the Commons

Posted by Stephanie Fysh in Across The Commons

Among the joys of browsing the Commons is finding those photos whose dates are more specific that “circa 1920″ or even “1920″. Here, in celebration of the middle of summer — or winter, as the case may be — are photos from across the Commons, from Julys past …

Cyclists climb over a closed railway crossing.
July 1932, the Tour de France.
Wielrenners beklimmen bewaakte overweg / Cyclists climbing over closed railway crossing
Nationaal Archief
“Revolutionary uprisings in Persia and Mexico threaten civil rebellion”.
July 5, 1908, the New York Tribune.
Revolutionary uprisings in Persia and Mexico threaten civil rebellion
The Library of Congress
The Dudley Cantrell Band plays at Grace Bros.
July 15, 1937, Sydney, Australia.
Dudley Cantrell Band, Grace Bros, Sydney, 1937 / Sam Hood
State Library of New South Wales
A young bride is prepared by her bridesmaids.
July 11, 1970, Nantucket, Massachusetts.
Being prepared by her bridesmaids, 1970.
Nantucket Historical Association
Tom Walton plays the guitar.
July 4, 1982, White Springs, Florida.
Guitar being played by Tom Walton: White Springs, Florida
State Library and Archives of Florida
The Langley Flyer superstructure is loaded onto a houseboat.
July 1903, Widewater, Virginia.
Loading Langley Flyer Superstructure onto Houseboat
DC Public Library
Berenice Abbott captures one moment in the city.
July 16, 1936, Union Square, New York City.
Union Square, 14th Street and Broadway, Manhattan.
New York Public Library
Seven testifying scientists pose for a photographer during the Scopes Trial.
July 1925, Tennessee.
Tennessee v. John T. Scopes Trial: The seven scientists asked to testify for the defense standing in front of the Defense Mansion.
Smithsonian Institution
American manufacturers parade on Independence Day.
July 4, 1893, Chicago.
Parade of American manufacturers on July 4th
Brooklyn Museum
And Mme Gadriol goes for a ride.
July 9, 1899, Luchon, France.
Mme Gardriol en chaise, Luchon, 9 juillet 1899
Bibliothèque de Toulouse

The Land across the Commons

Posted by Stephanie Fysh in Across The Commons

All of these images are taken from a Flickr Commons group discussion topic on “Landscapes across the Commons”. Those of us who posted in that topic found that while we knew there was a lot of historical landscape photography in the Commons, it was often not tagged to make it easily searchable. If you find more, please add tags, in English and other languages you may speak, to help later users find it as well.

Hakone Lake, Japan, late 19th century, chosen by Nina. View of Hakone Lake
New York Public Library
Swallow Cliff Woods area, Illinois, 1917, chosen by Nina. Swallow Cliff Woods area
Field Museum Library
Sintra, Portugal, 20th c., chosen by Penny. Sintra, Portugal
Biblioteca de Arte-Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian
Loch Earn, Scotland, about 1864, chosen by Penny. Loch Earn
National Galleries of Scotland
Percé Rock, Quebec, 1898?, chosen by Criz. Percé Rock, QC, 1898 (?)
Musée McCord Museum
Willoughby Falls, Australia, turn of the century, chosen by Criz. Willoughby Falls
Powerhouse Museum
Ryfossen, Norway, 1890?, chosen by Criz. Ryfossen, Valdres, Norway
Swedish National Heritage Board
Diamond Lake, Oregon, 1945, chosen by Nina. Diamond Lake with Mount Bailey in the distance
Oregon State University Archives
Castelet falls, France, circa 1900, chosen by me. Gouffre et cascades du Castelet, à 1 heure d'Ax-les-Thermes
Bibliothèque de Toulouse

Recent Uploads to the Flickr Commons

Posted by zyrcster in Recent Uploads

Your weekly introduction into the newest photographs uploaded to the Flickr Commons.

Our lead story? The George Eastman House uploads a set of Eugène Atget’s photographs just in time for their one year Commonsversary.

Atget’s unique documentation of the French capital captured the eye of surrealist photographer Man Ray, who worked to promote Atget as one of the pre-eminent photographic modernists. Later, the efforts of Berenice Abbott, who acquired Atget’s negatives and prints after his death, finally situated Atget’s work in the history of photography, where it continues to gain in stature and influence.

Wow. Just. .. wow!

Avenue de l'Observatoire
Eugène Atget
The State Library of Queensland, Australia, delivers yet another stunner as their Picture of the Week!

Flickr user orangecats says,

This pic taught me this Qantas stands for somthing … Queensland And Northern Territory Aerial Services Ltd.

Qantas hangar and biplane at Charleville airport, ca. 1930
Picture of the Week
Do you know how thick Gotham was? Find out in the fabulous set of news supplements from the Library of Congress.

I enjoyed this one since it provides a look at a skyscraper of yore, long ago torn down.

How thick is Gotham? One answer is: ten hundred and ninety feet
Illustrated Newspaper Supplements
The Bibliothèque de Toulouse uploads charming images of a village in France. They belong to quite a few different sets; I like the Personnages et portraits set for the stories it seems to tell. Hangar, Bélesta, octobre 1897
Bélesta, France
Look over there! A bear!

Another cool video from the State Library and Archives of Florida.


Filming Florida

Tag! Comment! Enjoy!

Recent Uploads to the Flickr Commons

Posted by zyrcster in Recent Uploads

This is your weekly guide to everything new in the Commons on Flickr for the past week. Take a moment to stroll through history and discover photographs of yore.

The National Archief celebrates the Tour de France with archival images of this famed bicycle race. Perhaps you can find some Now shots to pair up with these Then shots? Tour de France
Tour de France
The Oregon State University Archives chronicles the history of their state with some truly stellar photographs, featuring both Lewis and Clark (including other members of that expedition), Chief Joseph (the leader of the Nez Perces tribe), and Prairie Schooners. People and places:
People and places: “Early Settlement of Oregon”
50 new Bain News Service photographs from the Library of Congress are waiting for your help in tagging and commenting! Here’s U.S. President Wilson at his summer home. News in the 1910s
News in the 1910s
The State Library of Queensland, Australia, presents the construction of the Story Bridge in Brisbane just in time for the 69th anniversary of the bridge’s opening. Picture of the Week
Picture of the Week
Our friends the animals, brought to you by the Bibliothèque de Toulouse. Nos amies les bêtes
Nos amies les bêtes
View this set of tiles in Brazilian churches, identified by João Miguel dos Santos Simões when carrying out an inventory of the Portuguese tiles from 1960 to 1968, from the Biblioteca de Arte-Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian. Igrejas brasileiras
Igrejas brasileiras
Kick back with videos of Florida folklife, uploaded by the State Archives and Library of Florida.
Filming Florida
Florida Memory has also posted thrilling images of hurricanes! Here’s Ivan making some noise: Hurricanes in Florida
Hurricanes in Florida

Happy Commonsversary to the Bibliothèque de Toulouse!

Posted by zyrcster in Articles
Famille Crouzats, au Port de Venasque, Luchon, 6 septembre 1898

Eugène Trutat
Famille Crouzats, au Port de Venasque, Luchon, 6 septembre 1898, 1890
Bibliothèque de Toulouse: TRU C 343

A very happy Commonsversary to the Bibliothèque de Toulouse! They joined the Flickr Commons on June 28, 2008 with images of the Pyrénées from 100 years ago. They upload to the Commons on a very regular basis, so there is a variety of scenes to explore in their Flickr stream.

La côte basque chronicles life 100 years ago on the Basque Coast.

Most of these images are by Eugène Trutat, the Director of the Muséum d’Histoire Naturelle de Toulouse and a pioneer of photography.

La Côte Basque, Biarritz, Pyrénées-Atlantiques
La Côte Basque, Biarritz, Pyrénées-Atlantiques
The set Architecture, monuments et archéologie contains valuable images of dolmens in France — prehistoric human-made rock structures. Dolmen, Mas d'Azil, Ariège
Dolmen, Mas d’Azil, Ariège
Some favorites in the Toulouse’s stream are of the French countryside and culture, and the set A bicyclette … illustrates well the jovial air of their collection. Mlle X en vélo, Luchon
Mlle X en vélo, Luchon
Trutat also took some of the earliest photochromes. The archives of these autochromes also contains many geotagged images. Vue sur le château de la rue du Lycée, Foix, by bibliothequedetoulouse
Vue sur le château de la rue du Lycée, Foix
My personal favorites in their Flickr photostream are those of the bridges and aqueducts, some of which date back to the Roman era. Vieux pont, démoli en 1906, Cahors, 1891
Bibliothèque de Toulouse’s buddy icon
Ponts et aqueducs
No trip to France is complete without a visit to the miraculous Lourdes. Included in this set are a few marvelous stereograms. A la grotte, Lourdes, 23 août 1898, by bibliothequedetoulouse
A la grotte, Lourdes, 23 août 1898

Do take a stroll through the Toulouse’s stream and post up your favorites. Joyeux anniversaire!