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Information: The first column shows data points from Coolidge, Baldwin, 1845-1928 in red. The third column shows data points from Coolidge, Baldwin in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
Name Entries
Coolidge, Baldwin, 1845-1928
Shared
Coolidge, Baldwin
Coolidge, Baldwin, 1845-1928
Name Components
Surname :
Coolidge
Forename :
Baldwin
Date :
1845-1928
eng
Latn
authorizedForm
rda
Dates
- Name Entry
- Coolidge, Baldwin, 1845-1928
Citation
- Name Entry
- Coolidge, Baldwin, 1845-1928
Birth 7 Jul 1845
Woburn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Death 13 Dec 1928 (aged 83)
Pasadena, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Burial
Woodbrook Cemetery
Woburn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Find A Grave, viewed 3/3/21
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/151161800/baldwin-coolidge
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{
"contributor": "LC",
"form": "authorizedForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Coolidge, Baldwin
Name Components
Name :
Coolidge, Baldwin
Dates
- Name Entry
- Coolidge, Baldwin
Citation
- Name Entry
- Coolidge, Baldwin
[
{
"contributor": "harvard",
"form": "authorizedForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Male
Citation
- Gender
- Male
Citation
- Exist Dates
- Exist Dates
Birth 7 Jul 1845
Woburn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Death 13 Dec 1928 (aged 83)
Pasadena, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Burial
Woodbrook Cemetery
Woburn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Find A Grave, viewed 3/3/21
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/151161800/baldwin-coolidge
eng
Latn
Citation
- BiogHist
- BiogHist
Biographical Sketch: Baldwin Coolidge was born in Woburn, Massachusetts on July 7, 1845. He was the son of Mary (Manning) and BenjaminCoolidge and the great-grandson of Loammi Baldwin, Revolutionary War patriot and engineer for the Middlesex Canal. Coolidge grew up in Lawrence and became that city’s first engineer at age 33 before he changed careers and opened up his first photography studio in Boston in 1878. The photographer returned to live in a Baldwin family home in Woburn in 1889, around the time that the photographs of the Woburn Public Library were taken, living there through 1908. At the same time he continued to maintain a studio in Boston. He died in California in 1928; his ashes are interred in Woodbrook Cemetery in Woburn.
Baldwin Coolidge Photograph Collection, 1889, finding aid
https://woburnpubliclibrary.libguides.com/ld.php?content_id=50019424
https://viaf.org/viaf/28862135
https://viaf.org/viaf/28862135
https://viaf.org/viaf/28862135
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://viaf.org/viaf/28862135
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n99024897
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n99024897
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n99024897
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n99024897
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n99024897
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n99024897
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n99024897
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n99024897
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
Historical/Biographical Note </p> Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
eng
Latn
Citation
- Source
- https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Baldwin Coolidge Photograph Collection, 1889, finding aid
Biographical Sketch: Baldwin Coolidge was born in Woburn, Massachusetts on July 7, 1845. He was the son of Mary (Manning) and BenjaminCoolidge and the great-grandson of Loammi Baldwin, Revolutionary War patriot and engineer for the Middlesex Canal. Coolidge grew up in Lawrence and became that city’s first engineer at age 33 before he changed careers and opened up his first photography studio in Boston in 1878. The photographer returned to live in a Baldwin family home in Woburn in 1889, around the time that the photographs of the Woburn Public Library were taken, living there through 1908. At the same time he continued to maintain a studio in Boston. He died in California in 1928; his ashes are interred in Woodbrook Cemetery in Woburn.
https://woburnpubliclibrary.libguides.com/ld.php?content_id=50019424
eng
Latn
Citation
- Source
- https://woburnpubliclibrary.libguides.com/ld.php?content_id=50019424
Find A Grave, viewed 3/3/21
Birth 7 Jul 1845 Woburn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA Death 13 Dec 1928 (aged 83) Pasadena, Los Angeles County, California, USA Burial Woodbrook Cemetery Woburn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/151161800/baldwin-coolidge
eng
Latn
Citation
- Source
- https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/151161800/baldwin-coolidge
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/harvard/hou00124.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname">Baldwin Coolidge,</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00124/catalog
Citation
- Source
- http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00124/catalog
Breakwater Hotel (Woods Hole, Mass.). Breakwater Hotel collection, 1890s-2008.
Title:
Breakwater Hotel collection, 1890s-2008.
Many brochures reflecting the 70 years of the hotel's existence; postcards; mss. of articles on its history, and published versions of some of these; and a guest register (1921-1932).
ArchivalResource: 1 box.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/354989440 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Breakwater Hotel (Woods Hole, Mass.). Breakwater Hotel collection, 1890s-2008.
Fay family. Fay family collection, 1790-1976.
Title:
Fay family collection, 1790-1976.
Papers, chiefly relating to the activities of Joseph Story Fay during the period when he lived in Woods Hole and the activities of his heirs, Henry Howard Fay, Sarah Bryant Fay, and Joseph Story Fay, Jr. Includes items relating to Fay's daughter Sarah Bryant Fay, including loose photos and albums of her photographs, and Fay's son, Henry H. Fay and great-granddaughter Elizabeth Spooner Fay; biographical data and recollections relating to Joseph Story Fay and other members of the family; clippings and memorabilia; copies of Fay's publications on various matters including "The Track of the Norseman" (1876); and genealogical materials. An important part of the collection concerns the Fay Rose Garden, developed by Michael Henry Walsh with correspondence, account books, ledgers, from the Walsh garden, Walsh's yearly catalogs, photographs of the gardens in Woods Hole, photographs of competition plants at Massachusetts Horticultural Society; and prizes awarded to Joseph Story Fay and Sarah Bryant Fay by the society for roses, flowers, and vegetables.
ArchivalResource: 15 boxes.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/370380952 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Fay family. Fay family collection, 1790-1976.
Baldwin Coolidge Photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917
Title:
Baldwin Coolidge Photographic Collection
The Baldwin Coolidge Photographic Collection is comprised of over 2,000 original negatives, copy prints of the negatives, and a small number of original prints. Coolidge developed his prints on delicately toned Aristo paper. Coolidge was active as a professional photographer from the late 1870s until 1917, which time period is congruent with the chronological coverage of the collection. Boston, Massachusetts is the best represented locality in the collection.
ArchivalResource: ca. 2,000 photographic prints; ca. 2,000 photographic negatives.
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/ View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
Coolidge, Baldwin, 1845-1928,. [General John Crane House, Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.] [graphic].
Title:
[General John Crane House, Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.] [graphic]. [ca. 1882]
A photograph of 253-263 Tremont Street near the corner of Seaver Place and opposite Hollis Street in Boston, Mass. The view shows the house of General John Crane and the Seaver House hotel. Signage for the Wm. Davis & Co.'s confectionery store can be seen on the first floor of the Crane House. Playbills for J.K. Emmet's "Fritz in Ireland" can be seen on the left.
ArchivalResource: 1 photographic print on mount pasted down on gray card ; print 18 x 24 cm., mount 26 x 31 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/137335103 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Coolidge, Baldwin, 1845-1928,. [General John Crane House, Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.] [graphic].
Coolidge, Baldwin, 1845-1928,. Beacon St. & Charles [graphic] / Baldwin Coolidge, photographer.
Title:
Beacon St. & Charles [graphic] / Baldwin Coolidge, photographer. [ca. 1890]
A view of the intersection of Charles and Beacon Streets in Boston's Beacon Hill neighborhood. Numbers 66, 65, and 64 Beacon Street are clearly visible. A few stray pedestrians are shown as well as a man who appears to be working on a manhole.
ArchivalResource: 1 photographic print mounted on card ; print 20 x 25 cm., mount 26 x 31 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/52998331 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Coolidge, Baldwin, 1845-1928,. Beacon St. & Charles [graphic] / Baldwin Coolidge, photographer.
Coolidge, Baldwin, 1845-1928. [Autograph album].
Title:
[Autograph album]. [1871-1881]
An album belonging to "Hattie," Milton Mills, N.H. The name John F. Hart appears in the dedication, which says, "Go little book from friend to friend, " and is dated 1872. Contains poems, drawings, etc., contributed by people from Milton Mills; Lawrence, Mass.; Nashua, N.H.; Boston; and Great Falls, N.H., among other places. Includes a photograph pasted in of Annie S. Nutter, Lynn, Mass., and a poem and image of a pair of hands "drawing in, " done by Baldwin Coolidge, Lawrence, Mass. Milton Mills had several textile manufacturing companies that produced woolen, cotton and felt goods.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. ; 18 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50774714 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Coolidge, Baldwin, 1845-1928. [Autograph album].
Baldwin Coolidge Photograph Collection, 1889
Title:
Baldwin Coolidge Photograph Collection
The collection consists largely of exterior and interior photographs of the Woburn Public Library. One group of images is mounted in an album; the second group consists of matted prints.
ArchivalResource: One linear foot.
https://woburnpubliclibrary.libguides.com/ld.php?content_id=50019424 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive); 1861-1912 (bulk).
Title:
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive); 1861-1912 (bulk).
A collection of images, manuscripts, and printed material, mostly relating to the Massachusetts soldiers and regiments in the American Civil War. Some material relates to other Union regiments and the Confederate States of America.
ArchivalResource: 47 linear feet (143 boxes, 2 volumes)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00124/catalog View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive);, 1861-1912 (bulk).
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Breakwater Hotel (Woods Hole, Mass.)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Crane, John, 1744-1805
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fay family.
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6290xtg
View
employeeOf
Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Seaver House (Hotel : Boston, Mass.)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- William Davis & Co. (Firm : Boston, Mass.)
Woburn Public Library (Woburn, Mass.)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68q44fj
View
associatedWith
In 1889 Baldwin Coolidge took a series of photographs of the Woburn Public Library.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Woburn Public Library (Woburn, Mass.)
Biographical Sketch: Baldwin Coolidge was born in Woburn, Massachusetts on July 7, 1845. He was the son of Mary (Manning) and BenjaminCoolidge and the great-grandson of Loammi Baldwin, Revolutionary War patriot and engineer for the Middlesex Canal. Coolidge grew up in Lawrence and became that city’s first engineer at age 33 before he changed careers and opened up his first photography studio in Boston in 1878. The photographer returned to live in a Baldwin family home in Woburn in 1889, around the time that the photographs of the Woburn Public Library were taken, living there through 1908. At the same time he continued to maintain a studio in Boston. He died in California in 1928; his ashes are interred in Woodbrook Cemetery in Woburn.
Baldwin Coolidge Photograph Collection, 1889, finding aid
https://woburnpubliclibrary.libguides.com/ld.php?content_id=50019424
Woods Hole oceanographic institution
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6wm58wz
View
associatedWith
Coolidge took a series of over fifty images of the staff, students, and facilities of the Marine Biological Laboratory at Wood's Hole.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Woods Hole oceanographic institution
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, collector.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6c099t4
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, collector.
eng
Latn
Citation
- Language
- eng
Artists
Citation
- Subject
- Artists
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Ships
Citation
- Subject
- Ships
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Black-and
Citation
- Subject
- Black-and
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Black-and-white photography
Citation
- Subject
- Black-and-white photography
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Building
Citation
- Subject
- Building
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Churches
Citation
- Subject
- Churches
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Farmhouses
Citation
- Subject
- Farmhouses
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Fishing schooners
Citation
- Subject
- Fishing schooners
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Hotels
Citation
- Subject
- Hotels
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Public libraries
Citation
- Subject
- Public libraries
Biographical Sketch: Baldwin Coolidge was born in Woburn, Massachusetts on July 7, 1845. He was the son of Mary (Manning) and BenjaminCoolidge and the great-grandson of Loammi Baldwin, Revolutionary War patriot and engineer for the Middlesex Canal. Coolidge grew up in Lawrence and became that city’s first engineer at age 33 before he changed careers and opened up his first photography studio in Boston in 1878. The photographer returned to live in a Baldwin family home in Woburn in 1889, around the time that the photographs of the Woburn Public Library were taken, living there through 1908. At the same time he continued to maintain a studio in Boston. He died in California in 1928; his ashes are interred in Woodbrook Cemetery in Woburn.
Baldwin Coolidge Photograph Collection, 1889, finding aid
https://woburnpubliclibrary.libguides.com/ld.php?content_id=50019424
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Lifesaving stations
Citation
- Subject
- Lifesaving stations
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Photographers
Citation
- Subject
- Photographers
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Religious buildings
Citation
- Subject
- Religious buildings
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Americans
Citation
- Nationality
- Americans
Artist
Citation
- Occupation
- Artist
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
"...in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors".
Engineer
Citation
- Occupation
- Engineer
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Photographers
Citation
- Occupation
- Photographers
Biographical Sketch: Baldwin Coolidge was born in Woburn, Massachusetts on July 7, 1845. He was the son of Mary (Manning) and BenjaminCoolidge and the great-grandson of Loammi Baldwin, Revolutionary War patriot and engineer for the Middlesex Canal. Coolidge grew up in Lawrence and became that city’s first engineer at age 33 before he changed careers and opened up his first photography studio in Boston in 1878. The photographer returned to live in a Baldwin family home in Woburn in 1889, around the time that the photographs of the Woburn Public Library were taken, living there through 1908. At the same time he continued to maintain a studio in Boston. He died in California in 1928; his ashes are interred in Woodbrook Cemetery in Woburn.
Baldwin Coolidge Photograph Collection, 1889, finding aid
https://woburnpubliclibrary.libguides.com/ld.php?content_id=50019424
Woburn
AssociatedPlace
Work
Street
45 Pleasant Street
Baldwin Coolidge took a series of photographs of the Woburn Public Library, designed by Henry Hobson Richardson, in 1889.
Citation
- Place
Biographical Sketch: Baldwin Coolidge was born in Woburn, Massachusetts on July 7, 1845. He was the son of Mary (Manning) and BenjaminCoolidge and the great-grandson of Loammi Baldwin, Revolutionary War patriot and engineer for the Middlesex Canal. Coolidge grew up in Lawrence and became that city’s first engineer at age 33 before he changed careers and opened up his first photography studio in Boston in 1878. The photographer returned to live in a Baldwin family home in Woburn in 1889, around the time that the photographs of the Woburn Public Library were taken, living there through 1908. At the same time he continued to maintain a studio in Boston. He died in California in 1928; his ashes are interred in Woodbrook Cemetery in Woburn.
Baldwin Coolidge Photograph Collection, 1889, finding aid
https://woburnpubliclibrary.libguides.com/ld.php?content_id=50019424
Citation
- Place
Birth 7 Jul 1845
Woburn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Death 13 Dec 1928 (aged 83)
Pasadena, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Burial
Woodbrook Cemetery
Woburn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Find A Grave, viewed 3/3/21
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/151161800/baldwin-coolidge
Hull (Mass.)
AssociatedPlace
Work
Coolidge photographed the life-saving station at Hull, MA.
Citation
- Place
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Martha's Vineyard
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Coolidge maintained a summer studio on Martha's Vineyard, MA.
Citation
- Place
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
AssociatedPlace
Work
Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years.
Citation
- Place
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Boston
AssociatedPlace
Work
Coolidge photographed the Public Garden, Boston Common, T. Wharf, Trinity Church, Boston Public Library, Salada Tea Building under construction, Christian Science Mother Church, and many other streets and buildings in Boston.
Citation
- Place
- Massachusetts--Boston
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Massachusetts--Boston
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Pasadena
AssociatedPlace
Death
Baldwin Coolidge died in Pasadena on December 13, 1928.
Citation
- Place
Birth 7 Jul 1845
Woburn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Death 13 Dec 1928 (aged 83)
Pasadena, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Burial
Woodbrook Cemetery
Woburn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Find A Grave, viewed 3/3/21
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/151161800/baldwin-coolidge
Nantucket
AssociatedPlace
Work
Coolidge made a number of photographs of Nantucket, MA.
Citation
- Place
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Boston
AssociatedPlace
Work
Street
410A Boylston Street
In 1904, Baldwin Coolidge opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston, MA.
Citation
- Place
- Boston (Mass.)
Boston (Mass.)
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
MBLWHOI Library, Marine Biological Laboratory Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Library
AssociatedPlace
Work
Coolidge took a series of over fifty images of the staff, students, and facilities of the Marine Biological Laboratory at Wood's Hole.
Citation
- Place
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Boston
Address
Work
Street
147 Tremont Street, Boston
Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street in 1878.
Citation
- Place
- Tremont Street (Boston, Mass.)
Biographical Sketch: Baldwin Coolidge was born in Woburn, Massachusetts on July 7, 1845. He was the son of Mary (Manning) and BenjaminCoolidge and the great-grandson of Loammi Baldwin, Revolutionary War patriot and engineer for the Middlesex Canal. Coolidge grew up in Lawrence and became that city’s first engineer at age 33 before he changed careers and opened up his first photography studio in Boston in 1878. The photographer returned to live in a Baldwin family home in Woburn in 1889, around the time that the photographs of the Woburn Public Library were taken, living there through 1908. At the same time he continued to maintain a studio in Boston. He died in California in 1928; his ashes are interred in Woodbrook Cemetery in Woburn.
Baldwin Coolidge Photograph Collection, 1889, finding aid
https://woburnpubliclibrary.libguides.com/ld.php?content_id=50019424
Tremont Street (Boston, Mass.)
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Biddeford
AssociatedPlace
Work
Coolidge photographed the life-saving station at Biddeford, ME.
Citation
- Place
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Windham (N.H.)
AssociatedPlace
Work
Coolidge photographed the farmhouses and scenery in Windham, NH.
Citation
- Place
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Woburn
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Street
784 Main Street
Coolidge returned to his native city, Woburn, and lived in a Baldwin family house at 784 Main Street from 1889 to 1908 while maintaining a Boston studio.
Citation
- Place
Biographical Sketch: Baldwin Coolidge was born in Woburn, Massachusetts on July 7, 1845. He was the son of Mary (Manning) and BenjaminCoolidge and the great-grandson of Loammi Baldwin, Revolutionary War patriot and engineer for the Middlesex Canal. Coolidge grew up in Lawrence and became that city’s first engineer at age 33 before he changed careers and opened up his first photography studio in Boston in 1878. The photographer returned to live in a Baldwin family home in Woburn in 1889, around the time that the photographs of the Woburn Public Library were taken, living there through 1908. At the same time he continued to maintain a studio in Boston. He died in California in 1928; his ashes are interred in Woodbrook Cemetery in Woburn.
Baldwin Coolidge Photograph Collection, 1889, finding aid
https://woburnpubliclibrary.libguides.com/ld.php?content_id=50019424
Mount Washington (N.H.)
AssociatedPlace
Work
Coolidge photographed scenes along the Cog Railway and Summit House on Mount Washington, NH.
Citation
- Place
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
Pasadena
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Due to worsening health, Coolidge left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California.
Citation
- Place
Historical/Biographical Note </p>
Baldwin Coolidge was born in July 1845 in Woburn, Massachusetts to Benjamin and Mary (Manning) Baldwin. During the Civil war, he served in Company K of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment of the Light Artillery and was discharged in 1866. He married Lucy Ann Plumer in February of the same year. Like his grandfather, he worked as an engineer and held the post of city engineer in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Changing careers and moving to Boston, Coolidge established his first photography shop at 147 Tremont Street. In 1904, he opened a studio at his last location, 410A Boylston Street in Boston. Due to worsening health, he left New England to live with his daughter in Pasadena, California. Resuming his artistic vocations, Coolidge sketched and painted in watercolors. He died in 1928, and his ashes were returned to his hometown of Woburn for burial.Coolidge was a prolific photographer, amassing more than 20,000 negatives during his lifetime. Among the many types of images Coolidge captured, he focused his lens on life in Oak Bluffs, Nantucket, and Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the streets and buildings of Boston, pastoral and marine views in Windham, New Hampshire and Biddeford, Maine, and vessels of all kinds. In addition, Coolidge was staff photographer for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for thirty years
Baldwin Coolidge photographic collection, ca. 1878-1917, finding aid
https://www.historicnewengland.org/explore/collections-access/gusn/171274/
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Citation
- Convention Declaration
- Convention Declaration 63