First published on August 22, 2013 Voices of Harvey County: At the Corner of Main and Broadway: Pioneer Photographers, Part 1 (harveycountyvoices.blogspot.com)
by Kristine Schmucker, HCHM Curator
“At the Corner of Main and Broadway” is Part 1 of a two part series featuring two early Harvey County photographers.
Pioneer Photographer of Newton
A small notice on the front page of the Evening Kansan-Republican on 6 September 1947 reported the sad news that “another old timer passes.” Frank D. Tripp, “pioneer photographer of Newton” died at the age of 91 in Pueblo, Colorado.
Tripp has been credited with taking the earliest photo we have of Newton dated the “Summer of 71,” but was he? Tripp certainly was a well-known photographer in Harvey County throughout the 1880s and 1890s.
The 1880 Census lists Frank Tripp, age 21, living in Newton, Ks, working as a photographer. He was born in New York in 1859.
F.D. Tripp, ca. 1880 |
He, and another photographer, John Silverthorn, also 21, were business partners in 1880. The Newton Art Gallery was located in the “Diamond Block, Newton, Kansas.”
Newton Kansan, 27 Jan. 1881, p.3 |
Silverthorn was only in Harvey County for a year, before moving on, leaving F.D. Tripp as the sole photographer at the Newton Art Gallery.
Perhaps one of the earliest photos by Tripp.
Unidentified Man Photo by Tripp |
In 1882, Tripp married Laura F. Purcell on December 26 in Harvey County. They established a home in Newton and had three children; Homer, George and Genevieve.
Tripp worked as a photographer in Newton from 1880 through 1900.
Photos by F.D. Tripp |
Photo by Tripp |
Photo by Tripp |
By 1885, Tripp’s business was located at the corner of Main and Broadway in Newton.
Young John C. Nicholson by Tripp.
John C. Nicholson, 1886 HCHM Photo Archives |
Newton High School Class of 1896
Newton High School Class of 1896 Photo by Tripp |
He often displayed his work in the show windows of Main St. businesses during the Cin Quinto festivities. In 1897 he served as President of the Photographers Association of Kansas.
Sometime between 1900 and 1902, Tripp and his family move to Pueblo, Co, where he continued to work as a photographer at “Tripp and York Photographers”. Laura, his wife, died August 5, 1929 and was buried in a family plot at the Roselawn Cemetery, Pueblo, Co.. Eighteen years later, Frank D. Tripp was also buried there.
Who Took the 1871 Photograph of Newton?
While researching F.D. Tripp’s life, a mystery emerged. Who was the actual photographer of the 1871 photograph? Because of Tripp’s logo on the photo card, he usually get the credit for taking the photo. Research revealed that in 1871, Tripp would have been twelve years old based on information in his obituary, censuses and other records. An 1870 Census lists a 12-year-old Frank Tripp in the household of George and Caroline Tripp in New York. It seems unlikely that a teenage Tripp took the photo in Kansas a year later.
Were there other photographers that could have taken the photo? Part two of Pioneer Photographers will be posted next week.
Sources
- Newton Kansan, 1872-1881.
- Newton Kansan, 8 January 1880, p. 1
- Newton Kansan, 12 August 1880, p. 2.
- Newton Kansan, 19 August 1880, p. 2.
- Newton Kansan, 26 August 1880, p. 3.
- Newton Kansan, 16 September 1880, p. 2..
- Evening Kansan-Republican, September 6, 1947, p.1.
- Newton City Directories, 1885, 1887, 1902, HCHM Archives.
- United States Census, 1870, 1880, 1900.
- Newton Voter Registration Index 1882-1902, HCHM Archives.
- Harvey County Marriage License Index, 1882, HCHM Archives.
- Anthony’s Photographic Bulletin, Vol. 27, Google Books, p. 382.