35mm negative collection, 1936-1969.

ArchivalResource

35mm negative collection, 1936-1969.

Witman's 35mm negatives contain historic images of news events including the presidential campaigns of Roosevelt and Truman; the campaigns of Governor Lloyd Stark, Senator Stuart Symington, and St. Louis Mayor Barney Dickmann; and the Iron Curtain Speech by Winston Churchill. They contain photographs of St. Louis business and society leaders, and images of social events such as the Veiled Prophet Ball and the Municipal Opera. The negatives also include images of carnivals, baseball, boxing, Produce Row, steamboats, early aviation, a Negro baptism, horse racing, the unemployed, the military, war workers, union strikes, the state legislature, the Symphony, schools, scouts, colleges, the Art Museum, musicians, the police court, the public library, the city hospital, the morgue, the Zoo, and the prison. Witman also photographed the poor, the Ku Klux Klan, and blacks. One series documents the January 1939 Sharecroppers' Strike. Witman went to southern Missouri and photographed hundreds of sharecroppers and their families who had been evicted from their homes and were camping, with all their worldly possessions, along the rural highways as a dramatic demonstration of their desperate plight. Witman's work frequently included a full-page feature called "Candid Camera" that was modeled after Life Magazine.

71 microfilm reels (46, 105 frames) : negative, b&w ; 35 mm. + 71 microfilm reels (46,105 frames) : interpositive, b&w ; 35 mm.

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