Showing posts with label Lafayette Studios. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lafayette Studios. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
The Air Climbers
The Air Climbers, aerial stunt team at Halley Field in April of 1930. Halley was located on Leestown Road.
Labels:
Lafayette Studios
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Lafayette Studios photographs now on ExploreUK
- Lafayette Studios photographs: 1926-1929 (55 items)
- Lafayette Studios photographs: 1930-1939 (6543 items)
- Lafayette Studios photographs: 1940-1949 (6152 items)
- Lafayette Studios photographs: 1950-2003, and undated (1305 items)
Scope and Content: The Lafayette Studios photographs consists of 17,269 photographic negatives (52.0 cubic feet, 115 boxes) in the 8x10, 5x7, and 4x5 formats and both nitrate and acetate base materials are present. Scenes of commercial real estate in downtown Lexington predominate, but civil and social groups are represented, as well as photographic orders filled at the request of private individuals that cover a wide array of subject matter.
History:
Robert J. "Bob" Long and his wife, Ida Nelson Long, opened
Lafayette Studios in 1923, operating it out of the New Johns Building at 108
Walnut Street (now Martin Luther King Boulevard) in Lexington, Kentucky. Bob
and Ida Long already had a few years experience in still and moving image
photography and Bob Long worked as a projectionist at the newly opened Kentucky
Theatre on East Main Street. In 1925, they expanded their business and moved
the studio space to 311 West Main Street. By the early 1930s, the Longs bought
out their main competitor, Starman Studios. Around this time, Bob Long left his
job at the Kentucky Theatre and focused on building Lafayette Studios into
Lexington's most successful photographic studio. In the late 1930s, the Longs
moved again, this time to the Starman Studio space, at 301 West Main Street. By
1941, they moved again, settling into 141-143 North Limestone; it was to be the
studio's home until 1984. In 1959, the Longs sold Lafayette Studios to Chester
Wainscott and Goy Goforth and retired. After 1962, Wainscott became the sole
owner and operator until the studio closed in 1985 at its final location of 111
South Limestone.
Labels:
1920s,
1930s,
1940s,
1950s,
African-Americans,
athletes,
horses,
Industry,
Kentucky,
Kentucky History,
Lafayette Studios,
Lexington (Ky.),
women
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