If you enjoy local history books that are full of
fascinating facts and amusing anecdotes then you are going to love Swindon
Photographers & Postcard Publishers.
Co authored by Local Studies librarian Darryl Moody and
local historian Paul A. Williams, this compendium contains details of the numerous
photographers who have recorded the people and places of Swindon since the photography
craze took off in the mid-nineteenth century.
Darryl freely admits he has become obsessed with the weird
characters and their strange lives. Most of the photographers had second jobs,
many employed in the railway works, but apparently taxidermy was a popular side-line
as well.
Paul Williams is related to ‘Wiltshire local history royalty’
with a family connection to William Hooper (see the book for more about Hooper)
and Hammerman poet Alfred Williams.
Paul brought along some of Hooper’s photographic
artefacts to the book launch held yesterday at Swindon Central Library
including a stereoscopic viewer and the teddy bear Hooper’s young sitters were
given to hold while having their photo taken.
Swindon Photographers & Postcard Publishers is the third
in a growing catalogue of Swindon Libraries recent publications. The first was Swindon’s
War Record a reprint of W.D. Bavin’s seminal work on Swindon during the First
World War. The second was Roll of Honour 1939-1945 written by Katherine Cole,
the first ever record of Swindon men who served
in the Second World War.
Next in the publication pipeline is an update of Roadways – The History
of Swindon’s Street Names written by Peter Sheldon and Richard Tomkins in 1979.
I will also be working with the Local Studies team on a book about the development of post war Swindon, taking in West Swindon and the important and relatively unchronicled
history of Parks, Pinehurst and Penhill.
Of course, for me Swindon Photographers & Postcard
Publishers has opened up a whole new avenue of research. Now I want to know
more about photographers Minnie Kerslake (1874-1924) and Ethel Cowie (1884-1950?)
and Beatrice Bollard who worked more recently in the 1960s and 70s. How many of
these fascinating photographers lie in Radnor Street Cemetery and are long
overdue for inclusion on one of our guided walks?
Swindon Photographers & Postcard Publishers is published
by The Hobnob Press and costs £7.99. Copies are available in the
Library Shop, Swindon Central Library.







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