<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>underbelly &#187; Baltimore Photographs</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/tag/baltimore-photographs/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly</link>
	<description>FROM THE DEEPEST CORNERS OF THE MARYLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY LIBRARY</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Sat, 10 Aug 2013 18:24:04 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en-US</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.1</generator>
		<item>
		<title>The Photographs of Robert Kniesche</title>
		<link>http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2013/07/25/the-photographs-of-robert-kniesche/</link>
		<comments>http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2013/07/25/the-photographs-of-robert-kniesche/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Jul 2013 17:24:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mdhslibrarydept</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marylanders]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A. Aubrey Bodine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore photographers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Photographs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Sun]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Sun photographers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[charcoal club]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crown Cork and Seal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Damon Talbot]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[H.L. Mencken]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic photographs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maryland History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maryland photographers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maryland photographs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Matthew Williams lynching]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Memorial Stadium]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Robert Kniesche]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/?p=3306</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When longtime Baltimore Sun photographer Robert Kniesche died in 1976, a colleague praised him as “one of the best cameramen The Baltimore Sun ever knew.”(1) Although far more obscure than his famous contemporary at The Sun, Aubrey Bodine, Kniesche left behind a body of photographic work that stands among the best produced by a Marylander [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_3329" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 656px"><a href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/PP79.2376-cropped.jpg"><img class=" wp-image-3329     " alt="Robert Kniesche at work. Baltimore Colts vs Detroit Lions, October 2, 1961, Associated Press, PP79.2376, MdHS(reference photo - copyright owned by the associated press)" src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/PP79.2376-cropped-978x1024.jpg" width="646" height="675" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Robert Kniesche at work.<br />Baltimore Colts vs Detroit Lions, October 2, 1961, Associated Press, PP79.2376, MdHS.(reference photo &#8211; copyright owned by the Associated Press)</p></div>
<p>When longtime <i>Baltimore Sun </i>photographer Robert Kniesche died in 1976, a colleague praised him as “one of the best cameramen <em>The Baltimore Sun</em> ever knew.”(1) Although far more obscure than his famous contemporary at <em>The</em> <i>Sun</i>, Aubrey Bodine, Kniesche left behind a body of photographic work that stands among the best produced by a Marylander photographer.</p>
<p>Born in Baltimore in 1906, Kniesche recognized his calling early on, and he left Baltimore Polytechnic Institute without graduating to pursue a career as a photographer. In the mid 1920s, <em>The</em> <i>Baltimore Sun</i> hired Kniesche on as a news photographer, his first stint with the newspaper. Kniesche joined the staff a few years after Bodine, who at the time was a commercial photographer for the paper.</p>
<p>Kniesche and Bodine became fast friends and often traveled around Baltimore together on picture-taking excursions. Together, they snapped photographs of many of the same subjects that would bring both of them acclaim later in their careers: images of the city at night, the harbor, and Baltimore industry. They were also drinking buddies. The pair, joined by Raleigh Carroll, a <i>Sun</i> reporter and Bodine’s housemate at the time, and another <i>Sun </i>photographer Leigh Sanders, lived “high and well on their $40 and $50-a-week salaries”(2) In the prohibition years of the 1920s, they frequented the various speakeasies in the area around Park Avenue where Bodine lived. Every year they would attend the annual <i>Bal des Arts, </i>a wild, costume themed party held by Charcoal Club, Baltimore’s historic art club established in 1885. According to one Bodine biographer, “a day or two before the ball they would get a supply of gin from the busy bootleggers. Bodine and Kniesche carried their gin and juice in two suitcases. They would meet in the basement of the Charcoal Club on Preston street to apply their makeup and start ‘to get a package on,’ an expression in those days for getting drunk.”(3) Over the course of their long careers, the two often found themselves in friendly competition in local and national photograph competitions.</p>
<p>Kniesche left <em>The</em> <i>Baltimore </i><i>Sun</i> for a brief period in the late 1920s to work for the <i>Chicago Tribune</i>. He returned though in 1930, and aside from four years spent in the U.S. Navy during World War II as a pilot and flying instructor, where he attained the rank of Lieutenant Commander, Kniesche remained with the Baltimore paper for the next 40 years. In 1947 Kniesche organized the photographic department of the <i>Sun</i> owned WMAR-TV, the first television station in Maryland, and shot the first local films shown on the station. When he retired in 1971, he had been the chief of photography for <em>The Sun’s </em>morning, evening, and Sunday staffs for over two decades.</p>
<div id="attachment_3368" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 471px"><a href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/z24-611.jpg"><img class=" wp-image-3368 " alt="In 1957, the Press Photographer’s Association of Baltimore awarded Kniesche “Best in Show” for this photograph of the Ruxton train station. It was his second win in a row. The organization praised Kniesche in it’s annual publication: “Bob has always been known for his excellent aerial pictures but we’ll guarantee he rates tops in making Pictorial pictures as well.”  “Ruxton Station” (Whistle Stop, U.S.A.), 1957, Robert Kniesche, pp79.1466, z24-00611, MdHS." src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/z24-611.jpg" width="461" height="358" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">In 1957, the Press Photographer’s Association of Baltimore awarded Kniesche “Best in Show” for this photograph of the Ruxton train station. It was his second win in a row. The organization praised Kniesche in it’s annual publication: “Bob has always been known for his excellent aerial pictures but we’ll guarantee he rates tops in making Pictorial pictures as well.”<br />“Ruxton Station” (Whistle Stop, U.S.A.), 1957, Robert Kniesche, pp79.1466, z24-00611, MdHS.</p></div>
<p>As a photojournalist for Maryland’s leading newspaper, Kniesche documented virtually everything newsworthy, from presidential inaugurations, National Football League games, and aerial shows, to the opening of the oyster dredging season and city architecture. One of his early assignments after returning to Baltimore from Chicago in 1930 was to photograph the aftermath of Maryland&#8217;s first lynching since 1911.  On December 4, 1931, Matthew Williams, an African-American man accused of murdering his white employer, was lynched on the front lawn of the Salisbury courthouse on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. Kniesche was with a group of reporters and photographers sent by <em>The Sun</em> to cover the event. In his memoirs, H.L. Mencken, Kniesche’s co-worker at the newspaper, wrote that, “all the reporters who were sent to Salisbury from the home office were threatened with violence and one of the photographers, Robert F. Kniesche, was saved from rough handling, and maybe even murder, only by escaping in an airship.”(4) Kniesche would go on to photograph the famed journalist on many occasions over the following decades.</p>
<p>Like Bodine, Kniesche was an artist and master craftsman. One reviewer noted that he seemed “to have made a fetish of focus, [delighting] in knife-edge precision.&#8221;(5) Both photographers had an affinity for certain subject matter and many photos that Kniesche took could be easily be mistaken for Bodine’s and vice versa: duck hunters silhouetted against an early morning sky; blast furnaces spewing out flames at Bethlehem steel; oyster tongers on the Chesapeake. Kniesche was particularly renowned for his aerial photographs and photographic essays. One award winning series of his photographs that accompanied a 1949 series of <em>Sun</em> articles entitled “Maryland’s Shame the Worst Story the Sunpapers ever told” helped expose the deplorable conditions then rampant in Maryland’s state mental health facilities to the general public.</p>
<p>Kniesche was also very fond of animals and images of baboons, tigers, monkeys, and especially house cats, can be found throughout the collection of his photographs at the Maryland Historical Society. In his obituary, <em>The Sun</em> noted that Kniesche’s images of animals were executed “with an often sensitive and humorous approach to their expressions, habits postures and activities.”(6) He often posed his subjects in amusing positions accompanied by a humorous caption.</p>
<div id="attachment_3300" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 730px"><a href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79_unprocessed_kittens_in_jars.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-3300" alt="Kittens...in jars.  Kittens in Jars, undated, Robert Kniesche, PP79(unprocessed), MdHS.  " src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79_unprocessed_kittens_in_jars.jpg" width="720" height="412" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Kittens&#8230;in jars.<br />Kittens in Jars, undated, Robert Kniesche, PP79(unprocessed), MdHS.</p></div>
<p>His photographs won many awards and were exhibited both nationally and abroad as far away as Helsinki, Finland. His work was shown in cultural institutions throughout Maryland, including the Peale Museum and the Baltimore Museum of Art. Kniesche rarely sold any of his prints, preferring to give them away to friends</p>
<p>The Maryland Historical Society has over 7,000 negatives and prints that Kniesche took over the course of his career. Most of these are part of  <a title="Robert Kniesche Photograph Collection, PP79, finding aid." href="http://www.mdhs.org/findingaid/kniesche-collection-pp79" target="_blank">PP79, the Robert Kniesche Photograph Collection</a>. At this point, 5,000 of the film and glass plate negatives are available to the public. The remaining 2,000 prints  are currently being processed and should be available by the fall of 2013.(Damon Talbot)</p>
<p><em>Click on the slideshow below to see more of Robert Kniesche&#8217;s photographs.</em></p>
<p><b><i><i><div class="slideshow_container slideshow_container_style-dark" style="height: 600px; " data-session-id="0">

	<div class="slideshow_controlPanel slideshow_transparent"><ul><li class="slideshow_togglePlay"></li></ul></div>

	<div class="slideshow_button slideshow_previous slideshow_transparent"></div>
	<div class="slideshow_button slideshow_next slideshow_transparent"></div>

	<div class="slideshow_pagination"><div class="slideshow_pagination_center"></div></div>

	<div class="slideshow_content" style="display: none;">

		<div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79-1314.jpg" alt="Packed house at Memorial Stadium for the 1958 All-Star Game." width="720" height="574" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >Packed house at Memorial Stadium for the 1958 All-Star Game.</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >All star game, Memorial Stadium,
July 8, 1958, Robert Kniesche, PP79.1314, MdHS.</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div><div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79-567-2_tattoo-parlor-on-the-block.jpg" alt="Kniesche took a number of photographs of “the Block,” the stretch of Baltimore Street which has served as the city’s adult entertainment center for over a century, documenting the various strip clubs, burlesque shows, penny arcades, and tattoo parlors." width="719" height="568" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >Kniesche took a number of photographs of “the Block,” the stretch of Baltimore Street which has served as the city’s adult entertainment center for over a century, documenting the various strip clubs, burlesque shows, penny arcades, and tattoo parlors.</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >Tattoo parlor on the Block, undated, Robert Kniesche, PP567.2, MdHS.</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div><div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79-567-3.jpg" alt="Musical entertainment on the Block." width="720" height="577" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >Musical entertainment on the Block.</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >Band in a club on the Block, undated, Robert Kniesche, PP79.567.3, MdHS.</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div><div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79-17.jpg" alt="The Crown Cork and Seal Company was founded in 1892 by William Painter soon after he patented the ‘crown cork,’ the first bottle cap.  Located on the corner of Eastern Ave and Kresson Street in Canton, the company was producing half the world’s supply of bottle caps by the 1930s. Kniesche captured this image of a fire that began when two storage sheds containing 3000 bales of raw cork ignited." width="576" height="455" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >The Crown Cork and Seal Company was founded in 1892 by William Painter soon after he patented the ‘crown cork,’ the first bottle cap.  Located on the corner of Eastern Ave and Kresson Street in Canton, the company was producing half the world’s supply of bottle caps by the 1930s. Kniesche captured this image of a fire that began when two storage sheds containing 3000 bales of raw cork ignited.</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >Fire at Crown Cork and Seal, Baltimore, November 8, 1930, Robert Kniesche, PP79.17, MdHS</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div><div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/mc4028_ref_only.jpg" alt="“Water Ballet on Ann Street” - Kniesche won 1st Honor award in the Peale Museum’s 19th Annual Photo show for this 1960 photograph." width="864" height="752" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >“Water Ballet on Ann Street” - Kniesche won 1st Honor award in the Peale Museum’s 19th Annual Photo show for this 1960 photograph.</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >“Water Ballet on Ann Street,” Robert Kniesche, 1960, MC4028, MdHS.</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div><div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79-324.jpg" alt="Bethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard in 1940." width="716" height="566" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >Bethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard in 1940.</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >Bethlehem shipbuilding, Sparrows Point, April 7, 1940, Robert Kniesche, PP79.324, MdHS.</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div><div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79-390-1.jpg" alt="In May of 1956 Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus’ last outdoor show in Baltimore under canvas tent was held at Herring Run Park. The show featured such performers as Glenn Pulley, the “Thin Man,” who weighed 62 pounds; Ella Mills, the 586-pound &quot;Fat Lady&quot; from Wisconsin; Harry Doll, a 30-inch, 38-pound 44-year-old who was known as the &quot;World's Smallest Man.&quot;, a “Human Corkscrew,” and of course, clowns." width="577" height="720" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >In May of 1956 Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus’ last outdoor show in Baltimore under canvas tent was held at Herring Run Park. The show featured such performers as Glenn Pulley, the “Thin Man,” who weighed 62 pounds; Ella Mills, the 586-pound &quot;Fat Lady&quot; from Wisconsin; Harry Doll, a 30-inch, 38-pound 44-year-old who was known as the &quot;World's Smallest Man.&quot;, a “Human Corkscrew,” and of course, clowns.</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >Clown, Barnum &amp; Bailey Circus, last outdoor show in Baltimore, May 1956, Robert Kniesche, PP79.390.1, MdHS.</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div><div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79-1186.jpg" alt="&quot;Night Brakeman,&quot; 1957." width="568" height="720" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >&quot;Night Brakeman,&quot; 1957.</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >Brakeman, 1957, Robert Kniesche, PP79.1186, MdHS.</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div><div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79-1398.jpg" alt="Alongside his pictorial and journalistic work, Kniesche produced a large number of abstract images, often marked by high contrast, such as this 1970 shot of a ship’s gangway taken through a fish-eye lens." width="553" height="720" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >Alongside his pictorial and journalistic work, Kniesche produced a large number of abstract images, often marked by high contrast, such as this 1970 shot of a ship’s gangway taken through a fish-eye lens.</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >Fisheye on ship gangway, April 13, 1970, Robert Kniesche, PP79.1398, MdHS</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div><div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79-2419_reference.jpg" alt="Kniesche titled this image of an unusual piggyback ride, &quot;Don't you hit him.&quot;" width="864" height="698" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >Kniesche titled this image of an unusual piggyback ride, &quot;Don't you hit him.&quot;</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >&quot;Don't You Hit Him,&quot; undated, Robert Kniesche, PP79.2419, MdHS.</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div><div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79_1828.jpg" alt="H. L. Mencken having his bust done." width="648" height="431" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >H. L. Mencken having his bust done.</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >H.L. Mencken, undated, Robert Kniesche, PP79-1828, Negative#32, MdHS.</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div><div class="slideshow_view">
			<div class="slideshow_slide slideshow_slide_image">
				<a  target="_self" >
					<img src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp79-2583_reference.jpg" alt="Like his fellow Baltimore Sun photographer Aubrey Bodine, one of Kniesche’s favorite photographic subjects was the sea, and he produced some of his most picturesque work when he turned his camera to the water. One admirer described a Kniesche photograph of log canoes on the Chesapeake as “one of the most beautiful pictures I have ever seen – and much more beautiful than anything in the Louvre in Paris.”" width="864" height="718" />
				</a>
				<div class="slideshow_description slideshow_transparent">
					<h2><a  target="_self" >Like his fellow Baltimore Sun photographer Aubrey Bodine, one of Kniesche’s favorite photographic subjects was the sea, and he produced some of his most picturesque work when he turned his camera to the water. One admirer described a Kniesche photograph of log canoes on the Chesapeake as “one of the most beautiful pictures I have ever seen – and much more beautiful than anything in the Louvre in Paris.”</a></h2>					<p><a  target="_self" >Oyster Boats, undated, Robert Kniesche, PP79.2583, MdHS.</a></p>				</div>
			</div>

			<div style="clear: both;"></div></div>
	</div>

	<!-- WordPress Slideshow Version 2.2.11 -->

	</div></i></i></b></p>
<p><b>Footnotes: </b></p>
<p>(1) “Kniesche, Sun Photographer, obituary,” <i>The Baltimore Sun</i>, July 10, 1976.</p>
<p>(2) Williams, Harold A., Bodine: A Legend in His Time (Baltimore: Bodine &amp; Associates, Inc., 1971) p. 29.</p>
<p>(3) Ibid., p. 28.</p>
<p>(4) Mencken, H.L., edited by Fred Hobson, Vincent Fitzpatrick, Bradford Jacobs, <i>Thirty-five Years of Newspaper Work: a memoir </i>(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press., 1994) p. 212.</p>
<p>(5) Johnson, Lincoln F., “Weekend by day: Kniesche photo exhibit at historical society,” The Baltimore Sun, June 30, 1978.</p>
<p>(6) “Kniesche, Sun Photographer, obituary,” <i>The Baltimore Sun</i>, July 10, 1976</p>
<p><b>Sources and Further Reading:</b></p>
<p><a title="An American Tragedy, Underbelly" href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2012/11/29/an-american-tragedy/" target="_blank">An American Tragedy, Underbelly</a></p>
<p><a title="Charcoal Club Records, MS 1792, finding aid" href="http://www.mdhs.org/findingaid/charcoal-club-records-1888-1970-ms-1792" target="_blank">Charcoal Club Records, MS 1792</a></p>
<p><a title="Crowncork.com" href="http://www.crowncork.com/about/about_history.php, " target="_blank">Crown History</a></p>
<p><a title="Crown Cork and Seal Photograph Collection, PP33, Finding aid" href="http://www.mdhs.org/findingaid/crown-cork-and-seal-collection-pp33" target="_blank">Crown Cork and Seal Photograph Collection, PP33</a></p>
<p><a title="Darkroom - Robert Kniesche: A Life Devoted to Baltimore and Photography" href="http://darkroom.baltimoresun.com/2012/11/robert-kniesche-a-life-devoted-to-baltimore-and-photography/#1" target="_blank">Darkroom &#8211; Robert Kniesche: A Life Devoted to Baltimore and Photography</a></p>
<p>Johnson, Lincoln F., “Weekend by day: Kniesche photo exhibit at historical society,” The Baltimore Sun, June 30, 1978.</p>
<p>“Kniesche, Sun Photographer, obituary,” <i>The Baltimore Sun</i>, July 10, 1976.</p>
<p><a title="Maryland State Archives, Archives of Maryland(Biographical Series), Matt Williams" href="http://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc3500/sc3520/013700/013749/html/13749bio.html" target="_blank">Matt Williams, Archives of Maryland (Biographical Series)</a></p>
<p>Mencken, H.L., edited by Fred Hobson, Vincent Fitzpatrick, Bradford Jacobs, <i>Thirty-five Years of Newspaper Work: a memoir </i>(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press., 1994)</p>
<p>Rasmussen, Fred, “Remember when circus shows took place under canvas Finale: the last time the big top was raised was in Baltimore was May 22, 1956 in Herring Run Park,” <i>The Baltimore Sun</i>, March 22, 1998.</p>
<p><a title="Robert Kniesche Photograph Collection, PP79, finding aid" href="http://www.mdhs.org/findingaid/kniesche-collection-pp79" target="_blank">Robert Kniesche Photograph Collection, PP79</a></p>
<p>Schoberlein, Robert W., &#8220;Maryland&#8217;s Shame&#8221;: Photojournalism and Mental Health Reform, 1935-1949,&#8221; Maryland Historical Magazine, Vol. 98, Spring 2003.</p>
<p>Williams, Harold A., Bodine: A Legend in His Time (Baltimore: Bodine &amp; Associates, Inc., 1971)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.aaubreybodine.com/books/legend/star.asp"> </a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2013/07/25/the-photographs-of-robert-kniesche/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>The Velvet Kind: The Sweet Story of Hendlers Creamery</title>
		<link>http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2013/07/18/the-velvet-kind-the-sweet-story-of-hendlers-creamery/</link>
		<comments>http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2013/07/18/the-velvet-kind-the-sweet-story-of-hendlers-creamery/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Jul 2013 14:45:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mdhslibrarydept</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Neighborhoods]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[From the Darkside]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Holidays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marylanders]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[albert hendler]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore kidnapping]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Photographs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Borden's Ice Cream]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hendler's Creamery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic photographs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jacob Fussell]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[L. Manuel Hendler]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lara Westwood]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maryland Historical Society]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maryland History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maryland ice cream]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/?p=3208</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[July in Maryland can be truly miserable. The temperature sizzles at over 100 degrees for days on end. Humidity weighs down the most ardent of breezes. Luckily for the sweaty masses, July is also National Ice Cream Month. So in honor of the vaunted occasion, here&#8217;s the scoop on the history of the frosty treat [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_3191" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 717px"><a href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp30_225f-43.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-3191   " title="Moses Advertising: Hendlers sign, Hughes Studio, 1955, PP30 225F-55, MdHS." alt="Moses Advertising: Hendlers sign, Hughes Studio, 1955, PP30 225F-55, MdHS." src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp30_225f-43.jpg" width="707" height="572" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">One of Maryland&#8217;s most famous ice cream brands: Hendlers Creamery. Moses Advertising: Hendlers sign, Hughes Studio, 1955, PP30-225F-55, MdHS.</p></div>
<p style="text-align: left;">July in Maryland can be truly miserable. The temperature sizzles at over 100 degrees for days on end. Humidity weighs down the most ardent of breezes. Luckily for the sweaty masses, July is also National Ice Cream Month. So in honor of the vaunted occasion, here&#8217;s the scoop on the history of the frosty treat in Maryland.</p>
<p>Ice cream has always been a favorite summertime treat for Marylanders. Ice cream companies grew out of dairy businesses located across the state, and the country’s first ice cream factory was opened in Baltimore in 1851 by Jacob Fussell.</p>
<p>Fussell peddled dairy products in the city, but often found himself left with a surplus of cream.  Instead of letting the leftovers go to waste, he decided to make ice cream with it. He began to sell ice cream for 25 cents per quart, and Baltimoreans gobbled up his decadent yet inexpensive product. Ever the enterprising businessman, Fussell&#8217;s success inspired him to produce the sweet stuff on a commercial level. He founded the very first production facility at the intersection of Hillen and Exeter Streets in Baltimore and Maryland’s ice cream industry was born.*</p>
<p>One of Maryland’s most famous ice cream scions, Lionel Manuel Hendler, seized upon a similar opportunity when he founded Hendler Creamery Company in Baltimore. Hendler learned the dairy business from his father Isaac by working at the family-owned dairy store in East Baltimore, where he saw firsthand the popularity of ice cream. In 1905, at the young age of twenty, he decided to go into the ice cream business on his own and teamed with Louis Miller. The partners made the ice cream in the basement of Miller’s home and sold it to local stores. The product was a hit, and they soon moved production out of Miller’s house to a larger facility on Lloyd Street in East Baltimore. The business relationship between Hendler and Miller eventually fizzled, and in 1907, Hendler bought out Miller.</p>
<div id="attachment_3190" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 454px"><a href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp30_144-51-b.jpg"><img class=" wp-image-3190         " title="Hendler Creamery Co., building. American Sugar Refinery, Domino Sugar tank truck, Hughes Company, 1955, MdHS. " alt="Hendler Creamery Co., building. American Sugar Refinery, Domino Sugar tank truck, Hughes Company, 1955, MdHS. " src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp30_144-51-b.jpg" width="444" height="350" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Hendler Creamery Co. building at 1100 East Baltimore Street. American Sugar Refinery, Domino Sugar tank truck, Hughes Company, 1955, PP30-144-51, MdHS.</p></div>
<p>Under Hendler’s tutelage, the ice cream company quickly outgrew the production capability at the Lloyd Street plant. In 1912, Hendler purchased a grand brick building at 1100 East Baltimore Street to serve as the company’s new headquarters. The Richardsonian Romanesque building, built in 1891, located near Baltimore’s Shot Tower, had many other lives before being converted into an ice cream factory. It had first been home to a powerhouse for the Baltimore City Passenger Railway Company, the oldest streetcar system in the city. When the streetcar company joined with the United Railways and Electric Company, it continued to operate as a powerhouse and trouble station.</p>
<p>The streetcar company eventually sold the building to the American Amusement Company, when the cable and pulley system that operated the streetcars was replaced with electricity. Architect Jackson C. Gott transformed the building into a lavish theater that could seat 2,000 people. The Convention Hall, as it came to be called, ran a variety of entertainments, including exhibitions, vaudeville acts, and theatrical performances. Carl Hagenbeck’s circus performed for a period of time at the Hall, spurring his rival <a title="Death of Sport" href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2013/01/10/the-death-of-sport/" target="_blank">Frank Bostock</a> to bring his own show to the city as well.</p>
<p>The building changed hands several times over the next few years, though it remained a theater, operating under the names the Bijou Theatre, Baltimore Theatre, and the Princess Theatre. Vaudeville, operas, theatrical plays, silent films were all played and performed at the location. Its years as a Yiddish language theater, appealing to East Baltimore&#8217;s significant and growing Jewish population, proved the most successful, but even that was short lived. Only the Hendlers Creamery would stay in the building for more than just a few years. In fact, it served as an ice cream production plant until the 1980’s.</p>
<p>From its new headquarters on Baltimore Street, Hendlers ice cream grew into an iconic brand. Horse-drawn wagons delivered the frosty confection for many years until they were replaced by a fleet of trucks. After the switch, some of the horses remained loyal employees. Hendler’s son, Albert, recalled the return of one such horse, “We had sold some of our horses to Western Maryland Dairy. One afternoon in comes one of them pulling a wagon loaded with milk. It had come home. (1)”</p>
<div id="attachment_3195" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 471px"><a href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp30_54226.jpg"><img class=" wp-image-3195  " alt="Creamery, Hughes Company, 1941, PP30 54226, MdHS" src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp30_54226.jpg" width="461" height="366" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Ice cream truck drawn by horse&#8211;Hendler Creamery, Hughes Company, 1941, PP30-54226, MdHS</p></div>
<p>Refrigerated delivery trucks further expanded the business. The trucks could be spotted crisscrossing the state, delivering ice cream to more and more stores. They were emblazoned with the slogans: “The Velvet Kind” and “Take home a brick.” The angelic, little kewpie became the symbol of the brand, and advertisements featured the chubby cherub enjoying a bowl of Hendler’s ice cream. The ice cream was virtually everywhere in Maryland, as it was distributed to over 400 stores at the company’s peak, which kept the production lines humming. The factory ran six days a week with vanilla ice cream being made almost everyday.</p>
<p>Vanilla, chocolate, and strawberry were production mainstays, but the creamery dabbled in more exotic flavors as well. Hutzler’s department store sold several varieties, including ginger and peppermint. For the Southern Hotel, Hendlers supplied a tomato sorbet which was served as a side dish rather than dessert. The eggnog ice cream produced each year at Christmastime, which  Hendler made with real rum, was a major hit. The factory also cranked out other holiday-themed products, such as an Independence Day treat made with vanilla, strawberry, and blueberry ice creams and a Mother’s Day cake topped with a silk screen of James McNeill Whistler’s <a href="http://www.musee-orsay.fr/index.php?id=851&amp;L=1&amp;tx_commentaire_pi1%5bshowUid%5d=445">portrait</a> of his mother.</p>
<p>With all of the inventive flavors being churned out at his company, one would have expected Hendler himself to be a great lover of ice cream. But, this wasn’t the case, as his son Albert recounted: “As a child I remember Dad bringing home each day a couple of pints of ice cream of different flavors….Since he wasn’t a big ice cream eater, we’d do the tasting for him, and if a flavor wasn’t up to par we’d let him know in no uncertain terms. Someone was sure to catch hell the next day.(2)”</p>
<p>Hendler’s true passion lay in innovating and improving sanitation in the food production industry. The factory at Baltimore Street was fully automated. He invented and patented several machines that limited human contact with the product and developed one of the first air conditioning systems to keep the building cool. The delivery horses and their stable brought unwanted pests into the factory which forced him to close off the building. This caused the plant to be too hot in the summer, so he devised a system that cooled the place by pushing air through ducts, thus creating rudimentary air conditioning. He also used only tuberculosis-free or pasteurized milk from the earliest days of the business to prevent the passage of bovine tuberculosis through his product, which at the time was an uncommon practice.</p>

<a href='http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/?attachment_id=3194' title='PP30-394-51H Hendlers Ice Cream Truck'><img width="150" height="150" src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp30_394-51-h-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail" alt="Hendler Ice Cream Truck, Hughes Company, PP 30 394-51, MdHS." /></a>
<a href='http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/?attachment_id=3193' title='PP30-394-51G Hendlers Ice Cream Truck'><img width="150" height="150" src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp30_394-51-g-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail" alt="Hendler ice cream truck, Hughes Company, PP 30 394-51G, MdHS." /></a>
<a href='http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/?attachment_id=3192' title='PP30-271-43 Hendler Ice Cream Truck'><img width="150" height="150" src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/pp30_271-43-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail" alt="Photo of a Hendler Ice Cream truck with lettering on one side advertising war bonds and stamps, Hughes Company, 1943, PP30-271-43, MdHS" /></a>

<p>Hendler discovered that success has a price when he and his family became a target of criminals. Several extortion attempts were made to scare Hendler out of some of his fortune. On one occasion he received a note which threatened, “We will not try to kidnap you or your son; a few bullets from a passing automobile into your or your son&#8217;s car is one way of paying our unsatisfactory business debts. It will also serve as an example in our remaining business matters with our clients in Baltimore and Washington….(3)”</p>
<p>Most of these attempts were thwarted, but in 1932 three men succeeded in kidnapping young Albert. The kidnappers planned to extort $30,000 for his safe return. Hyman Goldfinger, Samuel Max Lipsizt, and Harry Surasky snatched Albert after a school dance at Johns Hopkins University, where he was a junior. Albert was blindfolded and driven to a house in Anne Arundel County, where the kidnappers questioned him about the possibility of securing a ransom for his release. Albert’s noncommittal answers gave the men cause for worry that they would not get any money after all. They began to argue about their next move. Goldfinger suggested that they kill the young man, convinced that their identities had been compromised, but the others didn’t want to escalate the situation. Surasky recalled the event at his trial: “[Goldfinger] insisted at first on choking him and then he took out his gun and wanted to blow his brains out. He already had his gun right near Hendler’s temple.”(4) They eventually decided to free Albert, so they dropped him off at the Hanover Street bridge. They took all the money he had in his pockets, but then reconsidered and gave him back a dollar for cab fare to get home.</p>
<p>Albert returned home shaken but relatively unharmed. He decided against reporting the incident to the police or his family. The kidnappers could have stopped there, but they decided to push their luck once again. Lipstiz sent a note demanding that Hendler send $7,500 to an address in New York City. Hendler agreed to do so but could not wire the cash, because of the Good Friday holiday. A second letter arrived with same stipulation, but the police were already on the case. He was apprehended, which led to arrest of his cohorts, all of which were sentenced to lengthy prison sentences.</p>
<p>These events did not derail the Hendler family or the ice cream business. The Hendler Creamery Company continued to grow, and in 1929, the Borden Company purchased the company. It continued to operate under the Hendlers Creamery name until the late 1960&#8242;s. Hendlers, and later Borden&#8217;s, ice cream became household staples, known for its thick and creamy texture and wide variety of flavors.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>*Some suggest that Fussell actually founded the first ice cream factory in Seven Valleys, Pennsylvania. This does not appear to be true, because the York County town did not yet exist when Fussell began his business. He purchased milk from the local dairy farmers, which he had shipped to Baltimore via railroad. Fussell did own some land in the area, but he never built on the site.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Sources and Further Reading:</strong></p>
<p>(1), (2): Albert Hendler and Amalie Ascher, &#8220;Ice Cream Days: Even Before Albert Hendler Started Working at the Plant, He Got a Taste of the Business at Home,&#8221; <em>Baltimore Sun</em>, July 26, 1981.</p>
<p>(3): Frederick M. Rasmussen, &#8220;<a title="Baltimore Sun article" href="http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2013-06-20/news/bs-md-backstory-hendler-kidnapping-20130620_1_baltimore-st-kidnappers-baltimore-sun">Exhibit recalls Hendler kidnapping of 1933: Hopkins student and son of Baltimore creamery owner was freed unharmed after a day</a>,&#8221; <em>Baltimore Sun</em>, June 20, 2013.</p>
<p>(4): &#8220;Suraksy Found Guilty in Hendler Plot,&#8221; <em>Baltimore Sun</em>, May 23, 1933.</p>
<p>Mary Bellis, &#8220;<a title="street car history" href="http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blstreetcars.htm">The History of Streetcars-Cable Cars</a>.&#8221;</p>
<p>Edward N. Dodge, ed., &#8220;Hendler, L. Manuel,&#8221; in <em>Encyclopedia of American Biography</em>, Vol. XXXIII (New York: The American Historical Company, Inc., 1965), 403-405.</p>
<p>Charles Glatfelter, &#8220;<a title="ydr article" href="http://www.ydr.com/opinion/ci_21337140/seven-valleys-ice-cream-claim-melts-under-scrutiny">Seven Valleys ice cream claims melt under scrutiny</a>,&#8221; <em>York Daily Record/York Sunday News</em>, August 17, 2012.</p>
<p>Robert K. Headley, <em>Motion Picture Exhibition in Baltimore</em> (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland &amp; Company, 2006), 247-248.</p>
<p>Brennan Jensen, &#8220;<a title="City Paper article" href="http://www2.citypaper.com/news/story.asp?id=2538 ">I Scream, You Scream</a>,&#8221; <em>City Paper</em>, April 29, 1998.</p>
<p>Jewish Museum of Maryland, <a title="ms 147" href="http://jewishmuseummd.org/blog/2012/07/ms-147-hendlers-creamery-collection/">Hendler&#8217;s Creamery Collection</a>, MS 147.</p>
<p>Maryland Historical Trust, <a title="mht" href="http://www.mht.maryland.gov/nr/NRDetail.aspx?HDID=1529&amp;COUNTY=Baltimore%20City&amp;FROM=NRCountyList.aspx?COUNTY=Baltimore%20City">Hendler Creamery</a>.</p>
<p>Gilbert Sandler, &#8220;Hendler&#8217;s: The Man, the Legend, the Ice Cream,&#8221; in <em>Jewish Baltimore</em> (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000), 87-89.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2013/07/18/the-velvet-kind-the-sweet-story-of-hendlers-creamery/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Baltimore&#8217;s Clothes Horse: David Abercrombie</title>
		<link>http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2013/05/16/baltimores-clothes-horse-david-abercrombie/</link>
		<comments>http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2013/05/16/baltimores-clothes-horse-david-abercrombie/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 May 2013 14:20:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mdhslibrarydept</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Then and Now]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abercrombie & Fitch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore City College]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Photographs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ben Koshland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Abercrombie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic photographs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maryland Historical Society]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maryland History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ronald Abercrombie]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/?p=2562</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Abercrombie &#38; Fitch – the name brings up images of young, scantily clad men and women staring out from advertisements with smoldering eyes and pouty lips. But the store known today for its teen apparel as well as its controversial ideas about how to dress children was originally a much different enterprise, offering clothing and [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_2528" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 356px"><a href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/ms1_d_abercrombie_horseback.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-2528" alt="David T. Abercrombie, undated, MdHS, MS 1." src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/ms1_d_abercrombie_horseback.jpg" width="346" height="576" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">David T. Abercrombie, undated, MdHS, MS 1.</p></div>
<p>Abercrombie &amp; Fitch – the name brings up images of young, scantily clad men and women staring out from advertisements with smoldering eyes and pouty lips. But the store known today for its teen apparel as well as its <a title="L.A. Times, April 1, 2011" href="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/04/woman-protesting-push-up-bras-for-young-girls-at-abercrombie-fitch-cited-by-mall-security.html" target="_blank">controversial ideas</a> about how to dress children was originally a much different enterprise, offering clothing and gear for the outdoor set a little over a century ago. One half of the dynamic style duo of founders Abercrombie and Fitch is a son of Baltimore and the innovator behind the company once known as the “Greatest Sporting Goods Store in the World.”</p>
<p>The future clothing magnate, David Thomas<i> </i>Abercrombie, was born in Baltimore in 1867 to John and Elizabeth Abercrombie. John Morrison Abercrombie immigrated to Baltimore as a boy in 1847 from Falkirk, Scotland. Prior to David’s birth, he attended Baltimore City College and eventually established himself as a newsman, working a managerial position at the Baltimore branch of the American News Company. Elizabeth Sarah Daniel, the daughter of a Scottish doctor practicing in Ottawa, met her future husband through family friends. The Abercrombies had a lot of children. First born, David was eventually joined by six siblings: John, Harry, Maud, Mary, Robert, and Ronald.</p>
<p>All but one of the Abercrombie sons followed in their father’s footsteps and attended City College (Robert attended Baltimore Polytechnic Institute). While at the school David developed a keen interest in both engineering and exploration.  After graduating in 1885 he enrolled at the Maryland Institute, School for Art and Design &#8211; now known as the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) – as an engineering student. While MICA might today appear an odd choice for a prospective engineer, the college was originally established as a trade school, and in 1885 still offered courses in fields like mechanical sciences and chemistry. According to school historian Douglas Frost, Abercrombie attended the college during its transition period when the curriculum began to shift from one offering a variety of mechanical, engineering, and artistic courses to a program increasingly focused on the visual arts. (1)</p>
<p>After graduating, Abercrombie left Baltimore to pursue his dreams of exploration. He worked as a surveyor and civil engineer for several railroad companies including the Baltimore &amp; Ohio. Abercrombie mapped and surveyed previously undocumented regions of the Appalachians ranging from North Carolina to Kentucky. To withstand the rugged terrain and ever-changing weather of the Appalachians, he fashioned for himself and his surveying crew personalized camping gear using textiles of his own design. In an Abercrombie family history written in 1940, brother Ronald noted that,</p>
<p>“[David’s] inventive genius enabled him to make a practical solution to most every problem of the prospector, huntsman, camper and woodsman. He was one of the best woodsmen, in its broadest sense, of his time. When sheet aluminum was first made, he was the first to utilize it in manufacturing of camp utensils, nesting kits and other useful articles for the camper. This application was soon followed in general use in home kitchen ware.”(2)</p>
<div id="attachment_2529" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 304px"><a href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/ms1_david_abercrombie.jpg"><img class=" wp-image-2529 " alt="David T. Abercrombie, undated, MdHS, MS 1." src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/ms1_david_abercrombie.jpg" width="294" height="403" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">David T. Abercrombie, undated, MdHS, MS 1.</p></div>
<p>Unfortunately, David developed farsightedness, cutting his field career short at the age of 25. However, Abercrombie’s ingenuity and innate talent for invention would eventually lead to greater successes in the clothing industry. After being forced into premature retirement from his chosen profession in 1892, Abercrombie’s fellow surveyors suggested he pursue a career as an inventor, manufacturing his creations for other outdoorsmen. He soon joined his uncle at the National Waterproof Fiber Company in New York City. Over the next six years Abercrombie worked for a series of companies manufacturing new products until 1898, when he opened his very own retail store on South Street in Manhattan. The David T. Abercrombie Company sold premium sporting products including fishing and camping gear, rifles, and specialized clothing. David’s own designs were often featured in the products.</p>
<p>The store was a hit among the Manhattan elite and gained enough success to warrant a move from South Street to the trendier shopping district on Park Avenue. His many clients included explorer Robert Peary and President Theodore Roosevelt  (Abercrombie also clothed the future president and his Rough Riders during the Spanish-American War). One particularly loyal customer was a lawyer by the name of Ezra Fitch. His interest in the store went beyond mere patronage, and in 1900 he left his practice to join Abercrombie as a business partner. In 1904, the store officially adopted the name Abercrombie &amp; Fitch Company.</p>
<p>The relationship between the co-owners quickly soured however, and within a few years Abercrombie and Fitch were battling over the future direction of their enterprise. Abercrombie wanted the store to remain true to its origins as an outdoor outfitter, but Fitch’s ideas for a more generalized retail store, catering to a larger clientele, won out. In 1907, a mere three years after becoming official partners, David Abercrombie “disposed of all his interest” in Abercrombie &amp; Fitch.*</p>
<div id="attachment_2532" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 210px"><a href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Abercrombie_family_crest.jpg"><img class=" wp-image-2532    " alt="Abercrombie Family Coat of Arms, MdHS, MS 1." src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Abercrombie_family_crest.jpg" width="200" height="402" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Abercrombie Family Coat of Arms, MdHS, MS 1.</p></div>
<p>While A&amp;F would go on to become a global brand, Abercrombie’s career in the clothing industry was far from over. With the help of his youngest brother Robert, David refashioned his old company, the David T. Abercrombie Company, into a textile manufacturer. Over the next decade, his success as a clothing outfitter only grew. As the United States prepared to enter World War I, Abercrombie’s reputation was such that the U.S. Army made him a Major of the Quarter Master Reserves, entrusting him with the management of the New York Packing Depot where his civilian employees “turned out an average of six thousand uniform-size packages a day.” His pioneering packing and folding processes, involving a stretchable, waterproof paper of his own invention, afforded the armed forces a new abundance of space. According to an article in the July, 1919 issue of <i>Popular Science Monthly</i>, in only a year’s time, Abercrombie’s innovations saved the government 85 million dollars. When he was discharged at the end of the war the government promoted him to the rank of Lt. Colonel. He continued to work in the manufacturing business until his death in 1931.</p>
<p>While David left Baltimore as a young man to find his fortune in New York, many of his siblings remained in Baltimore. Harry pursued a career in law, serving as a lawyer in the Legislature of Maryland and eventually becoming a judge on the bench of the People’s Court. (3) John became a physician and coroner. Ronald also went on to a successful career as a physician following his collegiate years at Johns Hopkins University where he was not only a gymnast, but also “the Best College Center at Lacrosse ever produced in this country,” which probably involves a bit of hyperbole as this quote was pulled from Ronald’s autobiography.(4) He later sat on several Hopkins boards and served as Director of Physical Education.** Ronald left a mixed legacy at Johns Hopkins as he later admitted in his autobiography that as the JHU “Director of Physical Education, [he was the] instigator or founder of the ‘Lily White’ practice in college athletics.”(5) As Hopkins did not admit its first African-American undergraduate student, Frederick Scott, until 1945, its delay in breaking down the segregation barrier may have had something to do with the influence of a certain alumnus. (6) Abercrombie &amp; Fitch would later deal with its own charges of racism &#8211;  in 2005 the company brokered a $40 million dollar settlement in a class action suit charging the company with racial profiling in hiring practices at its retail stores.</p>
<p>Today, the Abercrombie and Fitch brand has become as far removed from the original vision of founder David Abercrombie as can be imagined. The company once renowned for its top of the line sports gear now markets exclusively to fashion trendy teeny boppers. In a 2006 interview A&amp;F CEO Mike Jeffries laid out exactly who the store was in business for:</p>
<p>“…we hire good-looking people in our stores. Because good-looking people attract other good-looking people, and we want to market to cool, good-looking people. We don’t market to anyone other than that…In every school there are the cool and popular kids, and then there are the not-so-cool kids. Candidly, we go after the cool kids. We go after the attractive all-American kid with a great attitude and a lot of friends. A lot of people don’t belong [in our clothes], and they can’t belong. Are we exclusionary? Absolutely.”(7)</p>
<p>Ironically, the idea of enlarging the store’s market was what destroyed the partnership of David Abercrombie and Ezra Fitch a little over a century ago. But who knows, maybe Abercrombie would have approved the “good-looking” image if it promoted the fitness necessary for outdoor adventures. (Ben Koshland)</p>
<p><em>Years ago when I attended Baltimore City College, someone listed off some famous graduates of City and told me that Abercrombie of Abercrombie &amp; Fitch was a fellow knight. I always thought this was cool but just another fun fact or statistic I could use when crushing some silly engineer in the so called debate of the greatest high school in all the land. However, while going through some of the Johns Hopkins school ephemera at MdHS, I stumbled upon a program for a JHU athletic event from 1894. Alongside the traditional gymnastics, the program listed some pretty exciting events like class tug of war, roman ladders, and chicken fighting (not to be confused with <a title="Busted: the Chinkapin Game Club, 1963" href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2012/10/29/from-the-darkside/" target="_blank">cockfighting</a>); all things I think should be reintroduced into collegiate athletics. But while I was glancing over this program I noticed a name kept popping up, Abercrombie. He was listed as a participant in parallel bars, rings, vaulting horse, horizontal bar, and the roman ladder; not too shabby. I assumed this had to be Mr. Abercrombie and decided to do a little digging within the archives. It turns out this was not the Abercrombie of the clothing conglomerate; it was…his brother Ronald.</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div id="attachment_2597" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 766px"><a href="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/AF-Ads.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-2597" alt="What a difference a century makes... (left) Abercrombie &amp; Fitch Catalog, 1913; (right) Abercrombie &amp; Fitch Advertisement, accessed 2013.  (Images not from MdHS collection)" src="http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/AF-Ads.jpg" width="756" height="457" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">What a difference a century makes&#8230;<br />(left) Abercrombie &amp; Fitch Catalog, 1913; (right) Abercrombie &amp; Fitch Advertisement, accessed 2013.<br />(Images not from MdHS collection)</p></div>
<p>*Abercrombie didn’t cut all ties with his former partner – the David T. Abercrombie Company manufactured textiles for Abercrombie &amp; Fitch for many years following his departure from the company.</p>
<p>** Ronald was also a contributing member to Maryland Historical Society – in 1943 he published an article in the MdHS Magazine on the Sweet Air Estate. This estate owned by the Carroll family is now a part of GunpowderFallsState Park. The Sweet Air loop begins in Sweet Air, a few miles east of Cockeysville and runs all the way to the Pennsylvania boarder.</p>
<p><b>Footnotes:</b></p>
<p>(1) Frost, Douglas L. <i>MICA: Making History, Making Art.</i> Baltimore: Maryland Institute College of Art, 2010).<i> </i></p>
<p>(2) Abercrombie, Ronald. <i>The Abercrombie’s of Baltimore</i> (Baltimore: Private Publisher,  1940), p 20.</p>
<p>(3) Ibid., p.27</p>
<p>(4) Ibid., p. 29</p>
<p>(5) Ibid., p. 29</p>
<p>(6) <a title="The History of African Americans @Johns Hopkins University" href="http://afam.nts.jhu.edu/about" target="_blank">Wynhe, Dr. Barbara. “1945.” The History of African Americans @ JohnsHopkinsUniversity. May 9, 2013. </a></p>
<p>(7) Sole, Elise, “New Petition Urges Abercrombie &amp; Fitch to Change Its Anti-Plus-Size Stance,” Yahoo! Shine, May 9, 2013.</p>
<p><b>Sources and Further Reading:</b></p>
<p>Abercrombie, Ronald. <i>The Abercrombie’s of Baltimore</i>. Baltimore: Private Publisher,  1940.</p>
<p>McBride, Dwight A. <i>Why I Hate Abercrombie &amp; Fitch. </i>New York: NYU Press, 2005.</p>
<p><a title="Business Insider" href="http://www.businessinsider.com/abercrombie-fitch-history-2011-4?op=1" target="_blank">Business Insider, ABERCROMBIE: How A Hunting And Fishing Store Became A Sex-Infused Teenybop Legend, Accessed April 25, 2013.</a> <i><br />
</i></p>
<p><a title="Popular Science Monthly, July 1919" href="http://books.google.com/books?id=APhRAQAAIAAJ&amp;pg=RA3-PA62&amp;lpg=RA3-PA62&amp;dq=stretchable+paper+abercrombie&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=ptA4WDHvoc&amp;sig=Ptqi6DgWjQuyELapIdsuN2IkYvk&amp;hl=en&amp;sa=X&amp;ei=rDuNUc-BNoSMqQGAoIDQDA&amp;ved=0CDgQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&amp;q=stretchable%20paper%20abercrombie&amp;f=false" target="_blank">Connors, Michael, “Save Money By Bailing Your Clothes, Apply This Lesson Learned in the War,” <i>Popular Science Monthly</i>, Vol. 95, No.1, July, 1919.</a></p>
<p><a title="New Petition urges Abercrombie &amp; Fitch..." href="http://shine.yahoo.com/fashion/petition-launches-urging-abercrombie---fitch-to-change-it-s-anti-plus-size-stance-190830257.html" target="_blank">Sole, Elise, “New Petition Urges Abercrombie &amp; Fitch to Change Its Anti-Plus-Size Stance,” Yahoo! Shine, May 9, 2013.</a></p>
<p><a title="LAtimesblogs" href="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/04/woman-protesting-push-up-bras-for-young-girls-at-abercrombie-fitch-cited-by-mall-security.html" target="_blank">http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/04/woman-protesting-push-up-bras-for-young-girls-at-abercrombie-fitch-cited-by-mall-security.html</a></p>
<p><a title="minyanville.com" href="http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/abercrombie-fitch-lawsuits-sued-racial-racist/10/26/2009/id/25015" target="_blank">http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/abercrombie-fitch-lawsuits-sued-racial-racist/10/26/2009/id/25015</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2013/05/16/baltimores-clothes-horse-david-abercrombie/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>

<!-- Dynamic page generated in 0.426 seconds. -->
<!-- Cached page generated by WP-Super-Cache on 2013-08-12 10:59:09 -->