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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
February 17, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Thursday, February 17, 2005
The Glass Negatives of Former Town Historian William R. Montgomery
William R. Montgomery served as Historian of the Town of Pelham during
the 1920s and 1930s. He had an intense interest in, and abiding respect
for, the history of Pelham and surrounding areas.
One of Mr. Montgomery's lasting legacies is a very large collection of
glass photographic negatives taken during the 1920s. These negatives
contain images of many historically-significant structures in and near
Pelham, many of which no longer exist.
An Example of One of The Montgomery Images

The image that appears immediately above is created from one of the
many, many glass negatives created by William R. Montgomery. It is an
example of an image that documents a rich part of the history of Pelham
that no longer exists. It shows Coles on Boston Post Road. This building
that no longer stands was created in part from the Little Red Church that
served as the first church building of the Huguenot Memorial Church.
The Little Red Church was built in 1876. On April 14, 1915, the
congregation of the Church authorized a committee to investigate the
construction of a new church building. The following year the little
wooden church building was sold to a developer who moved the building
across the street to 4768 Boston Post Road -- essentially where today's
Getty Station stands not far from the intersection of Pelhamdale Avenue
and Boston Post Road. The developer rather haphazardly built additions
onto the structure and turned it into apartments above street level
stores. The building stood for thirty years until it was razed in 1948. It
stood on lands owned by Joseph Kennedy of the Kennedy Clan who served as
America's ambassador to Great Britain, among other things. To learn more
about Coles, see Old 'Red Church' In Pelham Manor Is Now Just A
Memory Of The Past -- Building Which Was The Original Huguenot Memorial
Church Edifice Was Razed This Week; Had Been Used as Apartment House for
Last 30 Years, Pelham Sun, Dec. 16, 1948.
William R. Montgomery's photograph of Coles that appears above shows the
structure on May 18, 1924. If you look closely, you can actually make out
arched windows from the original church building near the top of the
structure. The two signs are easy to read in the original photo that has
been reduced in size for inclusion in this Blog. The smaller sign reads
"Pelham Manor Drummond Real Estate 17 East 42nd Street, N. Y." The larger
sign reads "Drummond Real Estate". There is a Model T garaged near the
base of the building and another partially obscured by the smaller of the
two signs. There is also an unidentified man standing on one of the two
exterior porches at the back of the building.
The Provenance of The Montgomery Glass Negative Collection
Mr. Montgomery maintained meticulous records for each of his photographs.
For this particular photograph, his notes indicate the following:
"BUILDINGS: BUSINESS: COLES on Boston Post Rd. - formerly part of the Red
Church" and "Wm Montgomery 5/18/1924".
Thankfully, William R. Montgomery's glass negatives are stored archivally
in the collections of The Office of The Historian of The Town of Pelham.
Mr. Montgomery, it turns out, was quite an organized packrat. Upon his
death, his family contacted then Town Historian Susan Swanson and then
Deputy Town Historian Mimi Buckley asking for their assistance to organize
and index certain material discovered in the attic of his home. The two
historians agreed to assist with organizing and indexing books and papers
to prepare for an estate auction in exchange for a promise from the family
to donate the glass negative collection to the Town. The family agreed
and, after many, many days of long and arduous work, the effort was
completed and the negatives were donated to the Town.
Ms. Swanson and Ms. Buckly placed each glass negative in an acid-free
archival envelope designed specifically to store such items. On each
envelope they wrote bibliographic information copied directly from Mr.
Montgomery's records. The negatives inside their individual envelopes were
placed in several acid free archival storage boxes and stored in
accessible steel cabinets for further study and analysis.
Recent Efforts To Digitize The Montgomery Collection
For the last year or so, representatives of The Office of The Historian of
The Town of Pelham have been engaged in a volunteer effort -- at no
expense to the Town -- to digitize the Montgomery Collection of glass
negatives. The process is described below.
Each glass negative is placed on a flatbed scanner belonging to one of the
representatives of the Office. A transluscent white panel is laid across
(behind, so to speak) the negative and a goose neck lamp light source is
shined onto the negative through the panel. The negative is then scanned
at 300 dpi to create a .TIF image of the negative. The image is assigned a
control number (e.g., the image above is 00000095-B) and the
control number and all bibliographic data is logged into a Microsoft Excel
spreadsheet so that it can be imported into a database at a future date.
The .TIF image of the negative (designated as 00000096-A in the example
above) is then opened in a software program known as Adobe Photoshop
Elements 2.0 and is "inverted" (i.e., converted from a negative
to a positive image). The software is used to enhance the image, improving
contrast and brightening or darkening the image as needed. The "positive"
version of the image is then saved separately and designated as the "B"
version of the control number (e.g., 00000095-B).
William R. Montgomery's legacy extends well beyond the photographs that he
took of historically-significant views in and near Pelham. His
photographs, however, are a tangible reminder of his labor of love given
the difficulty in those days of carting his photographic equipment around
the area and then arranging the development and printing of the negatives.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
10:00 AM
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