Sous-s?rie organique SS1 - W.J. Moore photographs

Zone du titre et de la mention de responsabilité

Titre propre

W.J. Moore photographs

Dénomination générale des documents

    Titre parallèle

    Compléments du titre

    Mentions de responsabilité du titre

    Notes du titre

    Niveau de description

    Sous-s?rie organique

    Cote

    CA CCOQ C4-S01-SS1

    Zone de l'édition

    Mention d'édition

    Mentions de responsabilité relatives à l'édition

    Zone des précisions relatives à la catégorie de documents

    Mention d'échelle (cartographique)

    Mention de projection (cartographique)

    Mention des coordonnées (cartographiques)

    Mention d'échelle (architecturale)

    Juridiction responsable et dénomination (philatélique)

    Zone des dates de production

    Date(s)

    • [191?] - [19?] (Production)
      Producteur
      Moore, William John

    Zone de description matérielle

    Description matérielle

    77 photographs : b&w prints
    38 photographs : b&w glass negatives ; 20 x 25 cm
    29 photographs : b&w glass negatives ; 12 x 18 cm

    Zone de la collection

    Titre propre de la collection

    Titres parallèles de la collection

    Compléments du titre de la collection

    Mention de responsabilité relative à la collection

    Numérotation à l'intérieur de la collection

    Note sur la collection

    Zone de la description archivistique

    Nom du producteur

    (1887–1963)

    Notice biographique

    W. J. Moore was born in 1887 in Bryson, Quebec, one of eleven children of James and Elizabeth Moore. The family moved to De Winton, Alberta when Moore was in his early teens. By 1911 he had found work with commercial photographer Byron Harmon in Banff, Alberta. Harmon married Moore’s older sister Maude in 1907 and it is quite possible that Moore received his early photographic training from him.

    Moore, his parents and several brothers and sisters settled in South Vancouver and Burnaby in 1912. Vancouver was then in the midst of an economic boom, but in 1913 it became a depression. Moore established a commercial photographic studio out of his home, first at East 21st Avenue and later on Sophia Street.

    He bought a Kodak No. 8 Cirkut Outfit in 1913 and incorporated panoramic photographs as a specialty within his business, producing most of his work with this format in the first fifteen years of his career. After 1928, his use of this format was sporadic and production was solely by commission.

    Moore worked on his own until mid-1915, when he formed a partnership with Wilfred F. McConnell, purchasing the Canadian Photo Company from O. J. Rognon and Fred P. Stevens. While in this partnership, Moore signed panoramic negatives under both his own name and the Canadian Photo Co. The partnership was dissolved in 1921, with Mr. McConnell operating his photographic business under the Canadian Photo Co. name until 1933.

    In 1921, at the beginning of a decade of economic regeneration in Vancouver, Moore established his commercial studio out of the Winch Building on Hastings Street. William Read was hired as an assistant and worked with him for over thirty years, eventually purchasing the business in 1953 when Moore retired. He died in 1963.

    Historique de la conservation

    Portée et contenu

    The subseries consists of glass plate negatives and prints of photographs assumed to have been taken by W.J. Moore of various locations in Coquitlam and Vancouver.

    Zone des notes

    État de conservation

    Classement

    Langue des documents

      Écriture des documents

        Localisation des originaux

        Disponibilité d'autres formats

        Restrictions d'accès

        Délais d'utilisation, de reproduction et de publication

        Instruments de recherche

        Éléments associés

        Éléments associés

        Accroissements

        Identifiant(s) alternatif(s)

        Numéro normalisé

        Numéro normalisé

        Mots-clés

        Mots-clés - Sujets

        Mots-clés - Lieux

        Mots-clés - Noms

        Mots-clés - Genre

        Zone du contrôle

        Zone des entrées