At its start, photo journalism was a costly business involving wood engravings to reproduce the layers of a photograph for printing. But in the 1890s and early 1900s it became possible to produce pictures quite cheaply by the halftone process. This basically turned original photographs into a series of dots which could be printed. This was OK for a quick read of a newspaper, but not always so good for deciphering and restoring pictures all these years later.
Previously line drawings had been the norm
and this continued well into the early 20th century. They might have
been taken from photographs or just done by the artist on the spot. An example
of the latter is of Charles and Maria Russell facing each others at a court
hearing in 1906, as reported in the Pittsburgh
Press for April 26, 1906:
This article is about one typical line
drawing from 1899. It is found in the St
Louis Post-Dispatch. The issues for October 7 and 8, 1899, give a running review on a three day Bible Student convention,
held in the Tabernacle Church, 19th and Morgan Streets, St Louis, with
an attendance estimated to top 300 people on the final day, the Sunday.
One of the headings talked of “Pentecostal
Scenes.”
The Pentecostal movement with its “signs”
of healings and glossolalia mushroomed at
the end of the 19th century in America. As a side note here, one of
its parent groups was The Christian and
Missionary Alliance and this was where William H Conley nailed his colors
to the mast after leaving association with Zion’s Watch Tower.
But the heading “Pentecostal Scenes” did
not describe a “Pentecostal” meeting. Rather it seems more to refer to large
numbers getting baptised all at one time. In contrast to what might be seen
elsewhere, the write-up specifically described the behavior of those who were
there.
“The
audience at no time allowed its enthusiasm to get the best of it and become
frenzied or fanatical. It was happy, but reasonably so. There was no shouting.
The “Believers” are a practical people and do not counternance going to
extremes on any subject at any time. They counsel moderation and their meetings
are always attended with order and deliberation.”
We note here, and in the headline that the
Bible Students were calling themselves “Believers” on this occasion.
The write-up may be influenced by a press
release, but appears quite independent. CTR’s baptism talk lasted two hours –
as a reflection of the times it was noted there were both Jews and Negroes in
the audience – and the review covered Bible Student belief on the millennium
and organization, or rather lack of it.
Anyhow, to finally get to the point of
this article, the paper sent a staff artist to capture the scene. This is the result:
The curiosity is that it wasn’t just men, but both men and women in the picture. Why the artist chose these particular subjects is not known, but it gives an interesting flavor of the types of people you might just meet at a late 19th century Bible Student convention.
1 comment:
Thank you. I love these kind of details.
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