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Leo J. Beachy manuscript collection

 Collection
Identifier: MS 3087

Abstract

Collection of manuscript items relating to Garrett County photographer Leo Beachy. The collection includes notebooks, correspondence, published material by or about Leo Beachy, and books and periodicals in the possession of Beachy.

Dates

  • 1871-2001
  • Majority of material found in 1890-1920

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

The collection is open for research use.

Conditions Governing Use

The reproduction of materials in this collection may be subject to copyright restrictions. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine and satisfy copyright clearances or other case restrictions when publishing or otherwise distributing materials found in the collections. For more information visit the MCHC’s Rights and Permissions page.

Biographical Note

Leo Beachy (1874-1927) was one of the ten children of Jonas and Anna Beachy of Mt. Nebo Farm, Garrett County, Maryland, near Grantsville. He attended normal school and taught at one-room public schools in the area from 1895 to 1905.

A mysterious illness, posthumously diagnosed as multiple sclerosis, began to affect him as a teenager and eventually caused him to give up teaching. He lived on the family farm, augmenting his income with bee keeping and selling E. L. Kellogg’s educational magazine and books.

As a schoolboy, he was noted for his artistic ability. While teaching, he received a small Kodak camera with darkroom chemicals as a premium for selling books, but did not take up photography until the summer of 1905. He was immediately enthralled, “I had given more attention to fine art before than I realized and when I turned to the medium of the camera to give expression to my thoughts, it was so easy and delightful for me.” He avidly studied the work of contemporary photographers in periodicals such as American Photography and identified with the Pictorialist Movement.

As Beachy’s photographic skills grew, he “dreamed day dreams of a studio, with sky light, office, dark room, a large camera and a painted background.” A relative helped him build a darkroom in the farm’s springhouse; the spring provided water for washing the negatives and prints. He estimated that he processed 13,000 photographs in the last year that he used this little darkroom. He eventually achieved his dream with the “The Mount Nebo Studio,” a simple frame building with skylight and glass wall. Family members recall the local population lining up after church on Sunday to have their portraits made at the farm studio.

Beachy inherited the devotion to nature that passed down from Ruskin and the Pre-Raphaelites to American writers such as Gene Stratton Porter (both Ruskin and Porter were included in his library). He incorporated these ideas in a book he produced, Letters and Pictures for Isabelle. Illustrated with his photos, this little volume addressed a cousin who had moved to St. Louis, extolling the virtues of the rural life over the urban. Beachy’s photos won several awards during his lifetime and were published, once in National Geographic Magazine

Extent

1.3 Linear Feet (3 boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Purchased by the Maryland Historical Society in 1999, Accession #49918.

Related Materials

PP 0235, Leo J. Beachy photograph collection, 1889-1931

Scope and Contents

Series I: Published Material (Box 1)

This series consists of published material by or about Leo Beachy. Included are four copies of Letters and Pictures for Isabelle, a book by Beachy consisting of his letters and photographs, extolling the virtues of rural life over the urban. There is also a complete set of four volumes containing Leo Beachy’s photographs and writings compiled by his niece, Maxine Beachy Broadwater, and Matthew Novak. Volume I contains an autobiography by Leo Beachy. Beginning in 1982, the Beachy family began printing calendars with photographs by Leo Beachy that were on sale at the Grantsville Library and Main Street stores. Included in this collection is a copy of the 1992 calendar. This series also has a Life magazine article from 1990 containing a photo essay on Beachy which includes images and quotations. There is one unpublished item in this series: A 2001 masters thesis by Beth Ann Holler, entitled "Leo J. Beachy’s Creation of the Rural Ideal in an Age of Conflict: A Study of a Small Town Photographer," which argues for Beachy as "an interpreter of the impact of modernism on rural life.”

Series II: Books and Publications (Boxes 2-3)

This series consists of books and periodicals that were in the possession of Leo Beachy. Authors include: Beatrice Harraden; Thomas De Quincey; Moncure Conway, abolitionist and Unitarian clergyman; John Ruskin, English art and social critic; naturalist Gene Stratton Porter; and Scottish Evangelist Henry Drummond. There are also works on religion, photography, and education. Leo Beachy sold the educational books published by E. L. Kellog & Co., contained in this series to supplement his income.

Series III: Correspondence, Notebooks and Ephemera (Box 3)

This series consists of nine of Beachy’s notebooks, an account book, correspondence, postcards, newspaper clippings, and a map of Fort Riley, Kansas.

Title
Guide to the Leo J. Beachy manuscript collection
Status
Under Revision
Author
Processing begun by Mary Markey, circa 2000. Processing completed by Damon Talbot, June 2011.
Date
2011-06
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script

Revision Statements

  • 2020-04-01: Manually entered into ArchivesSpace by Sandra Glascock

Repository Details

Part of the H. Furlong Baldwin Library Repository

Contact:
H. Furlong Baldwin Library
Maryland Center for History and Culture
610 Park Avenue
Baltimore MD 21201 United States
4106853750