Vicksburg in the 1990s offered so many interesting photographic topics. It still looked like an "old" town, with small shops, hand-lettered signs, and buildings that stepped out of the early 20th century. It changed and slightly modernized in the decades that followed, so I am eternally grateful that I made the effort to get out and about with my camera way back when.
Here are some 1990 examples made on 4×5" film, some from my wood Japanese Tachihara camera and others from a Burke & James (an old-time camera manufacturer from Chicago).
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| Reverend Dennis with a visitor, 1990 (90mm ƒ/6.8 Wollensak Raptar lens) |
Margaret's Gro on North Washington Street was a folk art cultural icon for over 35 years. Reverend Herman D. Dennis married Margaret in 1979 and slowly transformed her store on North Washington Street into his Temple to the Lord. He told me he learned his brick skills from German prisoners of war who he guarded in World War II. Many of his foreign visitors were German tourists. After Margaret and Dennis passed away, the art work deteriorated and vandals stole pieces. The Mississippi Folk Art Foundation has preserved some of the materials in a warehouse.
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| Loading dock for logs, Yazoo Canal (Kodak Tri-X film, 75mm ƒ/8 Super-Angulon lens, yellow filter) |
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| Alley behind Washington Street buildings (Turner-Reich Triple Convertible lens at 8½ inch) |
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| North Washington Street view south (Turner-Reich Triple Convertible lens at 20 inch) |
The grassy field in the foreground had railroad tracks under the debris. At one time, passenger trains came to these platforms.
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| Openwood Street garage (Tri-X film, 75mm ƒ/8 Super Angulon lens) |
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| Kansas City Southern rail yard and Levee Street, view south to the Fairground Street Bridge (Turner-Reich Triple Convertible lens at 20 inch) |
The Kansas City Southern rail yard occupied a flat zone below the Vicksburg bluffs and just east of the Yazoo Canal. A rail yard had been in this area since before the Civil War. Unlike rail yards in big cities, this one had no fences, so one could take interesting pictures. The Fairground Street Bridge in the distance in the photograph above was open when I took the pictures in 1990, but it has been condemned and closed for over two decades. As usual: fate unknown despite its historic status.
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| Tank farm, Fairground Street (75mm ƒ/8 Super-Angulon lens) |
This tank farm was located at the western end of Fairground Street. It was unused for decades. I remember climbing one of the stairs to the top of a tank, and strong petroleum fumes swirled about. I am amazed that there was never a fire.
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| Hangar 3 (demolished in 2012) at the Waterways Experiment Station |
The Waterways Experiment Station acquired surplus steel hangars in the late 1940s. Some sheltered hydraulic physical models of waterways and harbors. Hangar 3 in the photo above
came down in 2012. Hangar 4 was demolished to make space for the new headquarters building.
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| Steam Laundry (90mm ƒ/6.8 Wollensak Raptar lens) |
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| Waiting for a load (Kodak Tri-X Prof 320, Caltar IIN 180mm ƒ/5.6 lens, 1 sec ƒ/16) |
The Vicksburg steam laundry on Grove Street was a fixture of the city in the early 20th century. Some old-timers told me that mid-century, many Vicksburg families never laundered any clothing at home - it all went out commercially. This laundry closed before I moved to town in 1985.
Before this building was converted into a laundry, it was housed the first industrial-scale Coca Cola Bottling plant. This was not the
Biedenharn Coca-Cola Museum on Washington Street. The Vicksburg Foundation for Historic Preservation owns that building and runs the very interesting museum.
In 1992, the Grove Street laundry/bottling plant suffered a catastrophic fire. The rumor at the time is that a developer found asbestos and torched the building rather than renovate it. That is not an unfamiliar story in Vicksburg. I have negatives from immediately after the fire (to scan some day....).
This ends our short 1990 tour of Vicksburg, Mississippi. Thanks for riding along.
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