Napoleon - An Intimate Portrait Napoleon - An Intimate Portrait



On eBay Now...

Rare Photo of Mt. Hood from Hood River Valley, Oregon. C 1908 Benjamin Gifford. For Sale


Rare Photo of Mt. Hood from Hood River Valley, Oregon. C 1908 Benjamin Gifford.
When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.


Buy Now

Rare Photo of Mt. Hood from Hood River Valley, Oregon. C 1908 Benjamin Gifford.:
$249.95

Very Rare Hand Colored Photo of Mt. Hood from Hood River Valley, Oregon. C 1908 Benjamin Gifford.


Son of Benjamin Gifford.

Benjamin A. Gifford (1859–1936)

By Megan K. Friedel

Benjamin Arthur Gifford was one of Oregon’s most prolific commercial landscape photographers

during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. From 1888 until his retirement in 1920, he

was nationally known for his large-format, often hand-colored photographs of the Columbia River

and its towns and people. Gifford, curator and photographer Terry Toedtemeier wrote, \"produced

the most comprehensive visual record of the Columbia Gorge—and indeed of the entire state of

Oregon—that exists from the early twentieth century.”

Born in DuPage County, Illinois, on November 11, 1859, Gifford left home in 1880 and briefly

attended the Kansas Normal School in Emporia. He worked for two years as a photographer’s

apprentice in Fort Scott before finishing his apprenticeship work in Sedalia, Missouri, with

photographer William Latour. In about 1880, he opened Tresslar & Gifford photography studio in

Fort Scott with photographer and partner Elkanah P. Tresslar (1847–1916). Two years later, he

sold his share of the business and relocated to Chetopa, Kansas, where he ran his own studio for

several years.

Gifford married Myrtle Louise Peck (1861–1919) in 1884 in Bourbon County, Kansas. In the

summer of 1888, the couple moved to Portland, and by 1891 Gifford was operating a successful

photography studio at Sixth Avenue and Morrison Street, across from the Portland Hotel. The Panic

of 1893 forced Gifford to move his business to his home on Corbett Street, where he improved on

his techniques. By his own account, he was the first photographer in the city to make enlargements

using an electric bulb rather than natural light sources, allowing him to make large-format prints

indoors at any time of day and regardless of weather conditions.

In 1894, Gifford partnered with Herbert Hale, a local photographer with a strong background in

landscape photography. With Gifford\'s enlargement set-up and printing mastery, the Gifford & Hale

studio, for a brief period, had a near monopoly on locally produced large-format prints and murals.

The same year, the Giffords’ only child was born, Ralph I. Gifford (1894–1947), who would become

a photographer and filmmaker.

In 1896, journalist William Gladstone Steel invited Gifford to join and photograph an expedition to

Crater Lake as part of his campaign to promote the lake and its surroundings as a national park.

Gifford\'s photographs from the expedition were published in several newspapers and magazines.

That work may have inspired the next phase of his career in which he focused on the commercial

possibilities of his photographs for advertising and marketing.

When Gifford’s partnership with Hale dissolved in 1897 or 1898, he moved his family to The Dalles

so he could more closely photograph the Columbia River, especially nearby Native communities.

He began making photogravure reproductions of his images, sold both as sets of loose prints and in

books, and produced hand-colored photo murals for train stations and schools. That work, with its

bold colors and romantic aesthetic, was aimed at marketing a picturesque vision of the Columbia

River Gorge. Railroads such as the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company bought his

landscape images to advertise the region\'s potential for settlement and tourism, and tourists bought

his lithographed and photo postcards as souvenirs of their travels.

While maintaining his home and studio in The Dalles, Gifford opened a studio in Portland in 1901

with his colorist and business manager Violet Kent. He eventually sold that studio to local

photographer Charles Y. Lamb and moved his family to Portland in 1910 so he could be closer to

his primary clients: railroads. He partnered with Arthur M. Prentiss in 1917 to form Gifford &

Prentiss Studio. Gifford’s most notable work during this time was a series of photographs of the

construction of the Columbia River Highway, which were exhibited at the 1915 Panama Pacific

Exposition in San Francisco.

Myrtle Peck Gifford died in 1919 after a long illness. In October of that year, Benjamin Gifford

married Rachel Morgan (1877–1973), a former schoolteacher from The Dalles who had worked for

him as a colorist in 1912 and was secretary of Gifford & Prentiss. He retired in 1920, and the couple

moved to a rustic log cabin in Salmon Creek, Washington, which they named Wa-ne-ka after one of Gifford’s most famous photographs of the sun setting over the Columbia. Ralph Gifford took over

his father’s business in Portland.

Benjamin Gifford died on March 5, 1936. He was buried in Lincoln Memorial Park (now Mount Scott

Park Cemetery) in Portland, and his gravestone bears the signature that appears on all of his

published photographs. Major collections of Gifford’s photographs are held by the Oregon Historical

Society and Oregon State University. His work, reproduced as high-quality photogravures, appear

in his books: Snap Shots on the Columbia (1902), Art Work of the State of Oregon (1909), and Art

Work of Portland, Mt. Hood and the Columbia River (1912).


It is in very good condition considering it\'s age. Very slight curve to the photo as well, but will flaten easily when mounted and framed. Light wear on edges. Slight impressions. Please see photos for condition.


Unsigned, but from a major Gifford Collection.

We have well over 300 in our own private collection.


100% Authenticity Guarantee.


Measures 7-7/8\"×9-7/8\".


Please feel free to ask questions.

Sold as-is.

Shipping is $8.95 here in the states.



Buy Now

Yvonne De Carlo RARE COLOR Photo 305 picture

Yvonne De Carlo RARE COLOR Photo 305

$15.00



Jenna Ortega  Sexy Rare  PUBLICITY 8.5x11 Print PHOTO -  938385. picture

Jenna Ortega Sexy Rare PUBLICITY 8.5x11 Print PHOTO - 938385.

$4.99



1926 Baltimore

1926 Baltimore " RARE " MOTORCYCLE TAXI 8.5X11 Photo

$11.98



President THEODORE ROOSEVELT Rare 8.5X11 Color Photo picture

President THEODORE ROOSEVELT Rare 8.5X11 Color Photo

$11.98



Doc Holliday Rare PHOTO Wild West US Marshal Gunfighter,Wyatt Earp Pal TOMBSTONE picture

Doc Holliday Rare PHOTO Wild West US Marshal Gunfighter,Wyatt Earp Pal TOMBSTONE

$4.38



Amazing 1877 Billy the Kid PHOTO Rare Discovery Playing Cards William Bonney picture

Amazing 1877 Billy the Kid PHOTO Rare Discovery Playing Cards William Bonney

$5.88



BRITNEY SPEARS Sexy Celebrity Rare Exclusive 8.5x11 Photo 3281 picture

BRITNEY SPEARS Sexy Celebrity Rare Exclusive 8.5x11 Photo 3281

$4.99



Kim Kardashian Sexy Celebrity Rare Exclusive 8.5x11 Photo 4918-- picture

Kim Kardashian Sexy Celebrity Rare Exclusive 8.5x11 Photo 4918--

$4.99



Images © photo12.com-Pierre-Jean Chalençon
A Traveling Exhibition from Russell Etling Company (c) 2011