19th Century Farm Scene, 1880-1890, by W.H. Bell, F0003.2011. Plowline: Image of Rural New York. The Farmers’ Museum, Cooperstown, New York. |
Recently, I used the photograph above with a group of students to discuss looking at agricultural photographs. It proved to be a fruitful and valuable discussion, better than I could have hoped for. Before the session I had spent quite some time looking at this photograph, discovering the details and thinking about the purpose and background of this 19th century image. Here I will discuss a little bit about what I discovered through looking closely at the details and a little research.
When
we added this image to the Plowline: Images of
Rural New York Collection last January, I thought I had created a fairly
comprehensive description. It wasn’t
until a couple weeks ago, that I found there was a lot more to learn about this
photograph. Let’s take a look!
What
do you notice first when you look at the photograph? I noticed the barn, five men, the stack of
loose hay, the hay on the wagon that the two men stand on, the team of horses
and the sleigh. Those seem to be the
main features of the photograph for me. When looking a little closer, I noticed there are two sleds turned
upside down in the foreground; bales of hay and of course, snow. Here’s what I didn’t notice or think too much
about until I was preparing for the class last month.
Detail, 19th Century Farm Scene. F0003.2011. |
Detail, 19th Century Farm Scene. F0003.2011. |
Detail, 19th Century Farm Scene. F0003.2011. |
These
two objects led me to question: why there was such a nice sleigh and hay press
with loose hay upon it (not to mention all the other hay and bales we see)
outside in the winter? What was the
purpose of this photo? The more I looked
at the photo and thought about these details the more I realized that this was
not a photograph taken by a photographer who just happened by this nice farm
scene during a leisurely drive in the county. This was a photo to show prominence, ownership, success. The nice sleigh, the newly-invented hay
press, all that hay suggesting a fair amount of land was owned, the strong team
of horses - all these show that the farmers were doing pretty well for
themselves at the time and they wanted to have a record to show it. Of course, with all these things discovered –
I still have a multitude of questions about what I don’t see in the photo or
have knowledge of. What type of farm was
this- gentleman or dairy, perhaps otherwise? What did the house look like? Who
ARE all these men in the photograph? Where exactly was this farm in Cortland
County, New York? When was that barn built? How much land was part of the farm? Did they lumber, sugar, ice harvest
in the winter and spring months (maybe that’s what they are alluding to with
those two small upside-down sledges)?
2 comments:
The team in the background is working a lever arangment which commpesses the hay in the chamber which has been stomped in the chamber prior to being commpacted by the horses.
This is a newer hay press. Earlier presses were upright and had to be loaded on a wagon or sleighs to move.
Tthe sleighs were also known as kinivers as they steered on both bobs and get around most anything so they were named after a kiniving person.
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