W.M. Van Der Weyde

Queens: Douglaston. Digital ID: 726487F. New York Public Library

For the past few months I have been working with a collection of photographs of various locations in the United States from the late nineteenth century to the mid twentieth century. The collection will be available on our wonderful digital gallery in the future and I’m looking forward to seeing these images uploaded – some of them are really amazing.

I wrote a while ago about Hilah Paulmier and of the trail of documents that led me to verifying her identity. Recently I discovered another photographer who sparked my interest: William M. Van Der Weyde who captured the above image which is part of the Photographic Views of New York City Collection. While working on the images from the rest of New York I found some amazing photographs from Camp Black, a recruitment center for the Spanish-American War, also by Van Der Weyde. I will write again when these are available digitally.

Interested to find any published biographical information on him, I checked the catalog and various other biographical databases only to discover he isn’t a subject heading (though he is an author). After some research I found the 1910 and 1920 census records which list Van Der Weyde as a photographer married to a Katherine, who is also listed as a photographer (I wonder where her photographs are…). He was born South America, his father was Dutch and his mother was a New Yorker. How curious! Well, I found another Van Der Weyde in the process, Pieter Henry Van Der Weyde, a New Yorker and renaissance man of sorts (read his obituary to see what I mean) for whom we have a collection of papers. The collection guide mentioned correspondences with Pieter’s children, one of whom is John Van Der Weyde, a photographer living in Uruguay – ah-ha! While there is so much more I could explore I have to learn where to draw the line. It’s hard though, I still find myself wondering about the mysterious Algot Lange.

Willaim van der Weyde

Hello - boy am I happy to see this thread! I am an academic working on the final stages of a manuscript to be published by Bucknell Univ Press on the visit of Henry James to the US in 1904-05. During his stay, two photographs taken by Van der Weyde were published; one, on Feb 11, 1905 p 198 of Literary Digest (which eventually was absorbed by Time in 1938); and a second on 5 Feb 1905 page 365 in Reader magazine to accompany an article by H.M. Fielding. The publisher wants high quality photographic images, and all i have are smudgy photocopies! I can get these on microform, but scans from that source are also of too poor a quality to use in the book. If anyone can help me with this, in terms of who i can contact to purchase the images--even negatives would be fine-- i would be eternally grateful! Btw, the primary author of the book is Robin Hoople, now deceased but who was a prof in American studies and literature at the University of Manitoba, in Canada, where I work. Thanks very much!

Thanks so much for your

Thanks so much for your interest - they are quite an incredible family, aren't they?

PH Van Der Weyde

Sachi: Thank you for mentioning the talented Van Der Weydes. I have been reading PH's memoirs and many of his magazine articles and I am stunned by his wide-ranging career and interests. He wrote a wonderful defense of evolution.

I just discovered your blog and I'm enjoying all your postings.

Regards,
Joe Thompson ;0)

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