Black-and-white photographs
Subject
Subject Source: Art & Architecture Thesaurus
Scope Note: Refers to a broad class of photographs having images in gray tones, black, and white, and sometimes one hue (which can result from chemical processes used, including toning, or from aging).
Found in 327 Collections and/or Records:
Annie Clark Tanner photograph collection
Collection
Identifier: P1217
Abstract
Annie Clark Tanner (1864-1941) was an author known for her autobiography A Mormon Mother, which chronicles her experiences as a plural wife and member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. The Annie Clark Tanner photograph collection contains two black-and-white photographs of Tanner dating from approximately the 1900s.
Dates:
circa 1900s
Mary Jane Mount Tanner photograph collection
Collection
Identifier: P0200
Abstract
The Mary Jane Mount Tanner photograph collection contains images of Mary Jane Mount Tanner and her parents, husband, and children dating from approximately 1850 to 1890.
Dates:
circa 1855-1900
Orland L. "Brig" Tapp photograph collection
Collection
Identifier: P1575
Abstract
Orland Lavell "Brig" Tapp (1909-1964) was an award winning independent filmmaker from Utah. This collection contains digital only scans from scrapbooks documenting Tapp's career and 8 loose black-and-white prints.
Dates:
1946-1970
Dave M. Tatsuno photograph collection
Collection
Identifier: P1163
Abstract
Dave Masaharu Tatsuno (1913-2006) was a Japanese American businessman and amateur filmmaker who secretly filmed his family's experience of detention in the Topaz Relocation Camp. This collection contains Tatsuno family photographs spanning 1902 to 2004, including images of them skiing, during their imprisonment in Topaz, and of the Olympic Torch Run.
Dates:
1906-2004
Jean Frances Eudey Taylor photograph collection
Collection
Identifier: P2223
Abstract
Jean Frances Eudey Taylor (1906-1998) was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints and a genealogist. This collection contains photographs of Jean Eudey Taylor's family and ancestors and the family of her husband, Frank Chase Taylor (1907-1948).
Dates:
circa 1870-1960
Jean C. Thatcher Family photograph collection
Collection
Identifier: P1291
Abstract
Emily Jean Crimson Thatcher was a musician and teacher who married George Washington Thatcher, a grandson of Brigham Young, in 1892. The Jean C. Thatcher Family photograph collection contains portraits of the Thatcher and Crimson families, their relatives, and friends.
Dates:
1897-1934
Emma Lou Thayne photograph collection
Collection
Identifier: P1138
Abstract
Emma Lou Warner Thayne (1924-2014) was a Utah poet, novelist, and educator. The Emma Lou Thayne photograph collection contains photographs depicting Thayne's family and life from the 1960s to the 1990s.
Dates:
1960-2000
Lowell Jackson Thomas photograph collection
Collection
Identifier: P1654
Abstract
Lowell Jackson Thomas (1892-1981) was an American radio broadcaster and writer who served as a war correspondent for both World War I and World War II. This collection contains photographs of Thomas' travels dating from approximately 1944 to the 1970s.
Dates:
1944-2010
Tom Botterill Automobile Company photograph album
Collection
Identifier: P1266
Abstract
The The Tom Botterill Automobile Company, later known as the Botterill Automobile Company, was located on 36-42 South State Street in Salt Lake City, Utah. This collection consists of an album containing 45 black-and-white photographs of the company, its business, and stock of autmobiles photographed by Harry Shipler and dating from 1908 to 1934.
Dates:
1908-1934
Milton Roswell and Milton Edwin Trenam photograph collection
Collection
Identifier: P1212
Abstract
Milton Roswell Trenam (1882-1937) and his son Milton Edwin "Ned" Trenam, Jr. (1905-1996) were engineers who worked in dam design and construction in the American West in the twentieth century. The Milton Roswell and Milton Edwin Trenam photograph collection contains photographs documenting their careers in dam building as well as Ned Trenim's military service in World War II.
Dates:
circa 1900s-1950s