Brady, Mathew B. (1823?-1896)
Mathew B. Brady (1823?-1896)
Photographer
An Odd Little Man. Union soldiers on the way to Bull Run in July 1861 were surprised to see following their column a small, bespectacled civilian with a goatee. He wore a long, white duster coat and a straw hat, and drove a black-curtained wagon. Not knowing what to make of the mysterious stranger, they shrugged him off and dubbed his odd-looking wagon the “Whatisit.” This man was Mathew B. Brady, the leading portrait photographer of Washington, D.C.—one of his subjects had been President Abraham Lincoln. Brady was now about to try something that few had ever attempted: to record on film the actual sights of war. Swept up in the Federal retreat following Bull Run, Brady failed at his first effort. Nevertheless, he persisted and went on to form several photographic teams to cover the Civil War. Today the pictures taken by Brady and his assistants represent landmark achievements in the history of photography.
Background. Brady was born in Warren County, New York, and although the exact year of his birth is not known, historians surmise it was around 1823. In the early 1840s he became interested in photography and was introduced to the daguerreotype process by the inventor Samuel B. Morse. (A daguerreotype was a photograph produced on a silver or silver-covered copper plate). Brady opened his own photography studio in New York City in 1844. Six years later he published his Gallery of Illustrious Americans, which confirmed his reputation as one of the foremost portrait photographers in the nation. In 1855 he experimented successfully with the wet-plate process of photography. When the Civil War began in 1861, he owned a gallery in the nation’s capital, and President Lincoln authorized him to accompany and photograph the armies so that a visual record of the conflict could be preserved. To the consternation of family and friends, Brady took the assignment. As he later explained: “A spirit in my feet said go, and I went.”
In the Field. In the 1860s action photographs were impossible to take because the exposure time (up to ten seconds) required by the wet-plate process blurred all movement. Brady, however, took many static pictures at the First Battle of Bull Run (21 July 1861), and in doing so inadvertently contributed to the rout of Union forces. A newspaper later reported that some of the Northern troops fled after mistaking the huge brass-barreled lens of Brady’s camera for the enemy’s rumored rapid-firing steam cannon. Thereafter Brady and his specially built darkroom wagon were seen on battlefields throughout the war. Brady and his assistants took many memorable scenes of the war, but their views of dead and wounded soldiers did not meet with public approval when they exhibited them in New York and Washington. For the general public, the stark reality of the pictures destroyed all romantic images of the war.
Legacy. The pictures of Brady and other photographers, such as Alexander Gardner and Timothy O’Sullivan, could not be reproduced in newspapers because the technology necessary to do so did not exist. Many of the photos, however, became the basis of line engravings in illustrated publications. When the conflict ended in 1865, war-weary Americans had little interest in buying Brady’s pictures. By that time Brady was in dire financial straits because he had paid for most of his travels and equipment with his own money. In 1875 the government alleviated some of his monetary woes by purchasing part of Brady’s collection. Although private collectors eventually paid high prices for his pictures, Brady never recouped his losses and died in poverty, in New York in 1896. Today many of Brady’s photographs are still used in history books, and a large collection of them is housed in the Library of Congress.
Source
Roy Meredith, Mr. Lincoln’s Camera Man: Mathew B. Brady, second revised edition (New York: Dover, 1974).
Mathew B. Brady
Mathew B. Brady
The American photographer, publisher, and pictorial historian Mathew B. Brady (ca. 1823-1896) was famous for his portraits of eminent world leaders and his vast photographic documentation of the Civil War.
Mathew B. Brady (he never knew what the initial "B" stood for) was born in Warren County, N.Y. The exact place and year are not known; in later life Brady told a reporter, "I go back near 1823-24." He spent his youth in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., and became a friend of the painter William Page, who was a student of the painter and inventor Samuel F. B. Morse. About 1839/1840 Brady went to New York City with Page. Nothing certain is known of his activity there until 1843, when the city directory listed his occupation as jewel-case manufacturer.
The daguerreotype process had been introduced to America in 1839, and Morse became one of the first to practice the craft and to teach it. Possibly Brady met Morse through Page, and perhaps he learned to take daguerreotypes from him. In 1843 Brady added cases specially made for daguerreotypes to his line of goods, and a year later he opened a "Daguerreian Miniature Gallery." He was at once successful: the first daguerreotypes he put on public exhibition, at the Fair of the American Institute in 1844, won a medal, and he carried away top honors year after year.
Brady once said that "the camera is the eye of history." He began in 1845 to build a vast collection of portraits, which he named "The Gallery of Illustrious Americans, " and two years later he opened a Washington branch, so that he could have portraits made of the presidents, cabinet ministers, congressmen, and other government leaders.
Brady sent 20 daguerreotypes to the Great Exhibition in London in 1851; they won him a medal and were greatly admired. In that year he traveled to England and the Continent. Shortly after his return he opened a second New York studio. His eyesight was now failing seriously, and he relied more and more upon assistants to do the actual photography. Chief among his many operators was Alexander Gardner, a Scotsman who was well versed in the newly invented collodion, or wet-plate, process, which was rapidly displacing the daguerreotype. Gardner specialized in making enlargements up to 17 by 20 inches, which Brady called "Imperials"; they cost $750 each. Gardner was put in charge of the gallery in Washington in 1858.
Perhaps the most famous of Brady's portraits was the standing figure of Abraham Lincoln taken at the time of his Cooper Union speech in 1861; Lincoln is reported to have said that the photograph and the speech put him in the White House.
When the Civil War broke out, Brady resolved to make a photographic record of it. The project was a bold one. At his own expense he organized teams of photographers— James D. Horan in his biography states that there were 22 of them—each equipped with a traveling darkroom, for the collodion plates had to be processed on the spot. Brady recollected that he spent over $100, 000 and "had men in all parts of the Army, like a rich newspaper."
When the war ended, the collection comprised some 10, 000 negatives. The project had cost Brady his fortune, and he became bankrupt. He could not afford to pay the storage bill for one set of negatives, which were sold at auction to the War Department. A second collection was seized by E. and H. T. Anthony, dealers in photographic materials, for nonpayment of debts. Today Brady's vast and brilliant historical record is divided between the National Archives and the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.
Although he maintained his Washington gallery, Brady never fully recovered from his financial disasters. In 1895 he planned a series of slide lectures about the Civil War. While he was preparing them in New York, he became ill and entered the Presbyterian Hospital, where he died on Jan. 15, 1896.
Further Reading
James D. Horan, Mathew Brady: Historian with a Camera (1955), not only recounts the few known facts of Brady's career but gives a vivid account of life in America and the state of photography in the mid-19th century; Horan was the first biographer to have access to the records of Brady's heirs. Roy Meredith, Mr. Lincoln's Camera Man: Mathew B. Brady (1946), is somewhat conjectural and poorly documented; it is, however, useful for its illustrations. In 1911 the Review of Reviews published the 10-volume The Photographic History of the Civil War, edited by Francis Trevelyan Miller; a 5-volume reprint (1957) contains many Brady pictures. □