We take this opportunity to thank Alice Austen, as without
her love of photography and her brilliant photographic record of New York
Harbour, we would have found it virtually impossible to restore the James
Craig to original detail. It is because of her breathtaking photographs
of the James Craig in New York Harbour that we have been able
to keep so much detail authentic.
One of Alice Austen's photographs of the Clan Macleod
(James Craig)
in New York Harbour.
The Alice Austen Story
From
the lawn of her Staten Island home "Clear Comfort", overlooking
the Verrazano Narrows at the entrance to New York Harbor. Alice Austen
observed and photographed the dynamic life of this great seaport, bequeathing
to us a priceless record of square riggers, coasting schooners, racing
yachts, tugboats, excursion steamers, immigrant ships and ocean liners
in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Today, that home is a museum, overshadowed
by the Verrazano Narrows Bridge, but still witness to the commercial and
recreational traffic that makes the harbor one of the world's pre-eminent
seaports.

Alice
Austen's home "Clear Comfort",
overlooking the Verrazano Narrows
at the entrance to New York Harbour.
Young
Alice was only ten years old in 1876 when she got her hands on her first
camera, loaned to her by her Danish sea-captain uncle, Oswald Muller.
She took to the medium immediately and soon became a skilled photographer
with an artist's eye for composition and light and a scientist's understanding
of the new technology. She was a pioneer in the new field of photography,
capturing places, people and events that no one else, man or woman, was
recording. Her home, family, friends and New York harbor were her first
subjects, but she soon took her craft out into the wider world, to tennis
courts and race tracks, to quarantine stations like Hoffman and Swinburne
islands, to South Street where the great ships berthed, to the busy streets
of Lower Manhattan, and on her travels up and down the East Coast, to
the Chicago World's Fair and to Europe.
Born into a wealthy Staten Island family and raised as the only child
in a household with six adults - her mother (Alice's father had deserted
his family, possibly before Alice was born), her grandparents, her mother's
siblings Mary and Peter, and Mary's husband Oswald - Alice had the leisure
to explore her newfound interest and the funds to pay for expensive equipment.
In that era, photography was not a hobby you could pick up on a whim.
Expense was not the only consideration. The cameras when owned were heavy,
cumbersome instruments that required a tripod to hold the camera steady
for several seconds needed to take the picture. The images were made on
glass plates, which she had to carry with her - one for every shot she
planned. She then took the plates home and processed them in her own closet-like
darkroom on the second floor of the house. Because there was no running
water in the house for most of her life, she took the plates out to the
pump to be rinsed in all weather.
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Composing
the photograph, evaluating the natural lighting, the optimal exposure
time, the amounts of the dangerous magnesium flash powder needed to illuminate
an indoor scene and the correct methods of processing the plates made
up a challenging combination of art and science. Alice more than met that
challenge. Throughout her life she experimented constantly with her art
and she recorded her experiments meticulously on the sleeves that held
each plate, listing the date, subject, weather, time, location, camera
and lens used, the exposure time and other assorted details. A typical
entry reads "Wisteria taken from window upstairs. No sun, but not
far away. A sort of Indian summer day, glimmering, 2.40pm. May 21st, 1914.
Stanley Ortho. Counted 20. Azo Hard G Matte."
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Clan McCleod (James Craig) at anchor off Straten Island Photo: Alice Austen
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Amateur
only in that she did not get paid for her craft, she energetically pursued
photography until arthritis made it too difficult for her to manipulate
the camera. It is estimated that she took some 7,000 photographs in her
lifetime. Of those, 3,500 or so survive in the Staten Island Historical
Society, rescued by chance. Few of these had been seen by any but family
and friends. Austen did get copyrights on about 150 images, some of which
became postcards. Another series of photographs of men, women and children
on the streets of Lower Manhattan were part of a series entitled "New
York Street Types" which were mounted and sold in a folder tied with
a silk ribbon. In the mid-1890's she took photographs to illustrate a
book on bicycling for ladies for her friend Violet Ward, which gave her
an opportunity to further her experiments photographing people and objects
in motion, a challenge she wrestled with throughout her photographic
career.
After
the stock market crash in 1929, Alice Austen's life changed dramatically.
Throughout her younger years she had not had financial worries and her
social position in Staten Island, as well as the force of her personality,
made her a person of influence in her community. However, with the loss
of her money at the age of 63, life became difficult. She had never married
and had stayed at "Clear Comfort" after her family passed away.
She lived there with her friend Gertrude Tate for 16 more years, trying
to keep her home and possessions together. Gertrude ran a dancing school
for years and the two ladies opened an unsuccessful tea room in their
house for several summers. Finally, in 1945, they were forced out. After
several increasingly traumatic moves, Austen signed a statement acknowledging
herself a pauper and was given a bed in the Staten Island Farm Colony,
basically a poor house, where she would have ended her days had she not
been found by Oliver Jensen, a former editor at Life who would
go on to found the American Heritage Publishing Company.
In
1951, Jensen was looking for photographs by women for his book The
Revolt of American Women. The Staten Island Historical Society brought
Alice Austen's photographs to his attention. Jensen was highly impressed
with the skill of the photographer and the social history recorded in
the collection and was astounded and delighted to discover that she was
still alive. When he found her, she was unresponsive until he showed her
prints made from her glass plates. She gradually came out of her withdrawal
to tell him the stories behind the people, places and events in the photographs.
Jensen managed to get her photographs published in several magazines,
raising over $4000. Austen's share of this was sufficient to move her
out of the poor house and into a comfortable, private room in a nearby
nursing home. She died in June 1952, after having enjoyed a few brief
months of fame for her remarkable photographs of her world.
It
was a sad ending to what had been a happy and full life. By all accounts,
Alice had been possessed of a lively intelligence, great curiosity, a
sense of fun, a formidable talent for organising, and considerable charm
and stubbornness - great assets when trying to get friends, family and
strangers to pose at length for photographs that had to meet her exacting
standards. Lawn tennis, golf, swimming, sailing, bicycling, parties, dances,
gardening, social organisations and travel in the US and abroad - Alice
Austen participated fully in the activities available to one of her position,
but she was also always an observer by virtue of her chosen medium.
While
many of her photographs are of family and friends, she explored farther
afield than most women of her era would, or could, have gone. She seems
as comfortable in commercial and industrial surroundings as she was at
home or on a tennis court. In Boston she took a photograph from aboard
a fishing schooner at the dock; in Annapolis a line of African-Americans
posed for her in an oyster-shucking house; in Hoboken she spent hours
climbing through the ruins of a recently burned block of houses.
Immigration was a subject that fascinated her. The ships bringing Europeans
to New York passed by her windows every day, and the quarantine station
was nearby. She was frequently at Hoffman and Swinburne islands and one
of her quasi-professional jobs was on the quarantine ship James Wadsworth,
as it went out to disinfect a ship suspected of carrying yellow fever.
When in Manhattan, she photographed new arrivals, as well as immigrants
in their neighborhoods.
Unlike other photographers who took their craft to poor neighborhoods,
Austen was not looking for the seamy underbelly of New York City. Her
subjects, for the most part, appear healthy, friendly and interested in
the world around them. Barefoot children selling newspapers look cheeky,
not downtrodden, immigrant women at the market seem to be stopped in mid-converstation,
a cheerful policeman proudly presents his profile for the camera and fishermen
pause in the midst of a business deal to face the photographer. Some of
these photographs were taken in South Street, surely one of the least
likely places in New York to find a well-bred young lady.
Elsewhere on New York's waterfronts she captured sailors taking wood from
the hull of a wrecked sailing ship, passengers aboard the ferry, a shadfishing
station just north of her house, Sea Witch at a South Street
pier, naval parades, yacht races, and the never ending flow of traffic
that passed by her window. An avid sailor herself, she captured some of
the most famous yachts in history including the races for the America's
Cup between Puritan and Generation in 1885 and Valkyrie
and Vigilante in 1893.
Jensen
recalls Alice Austen telling him that she was such a determined and untiring
photographer in part because she realised the world she knew was vanishing,
and she wanted to preserve some part of it for the future. That goal she
certainly accomplished. New York Harbour had a talented and artistic champion
in Alice Austen and she indeed left us with an incomparable record of
our seafaring past from a unique perspective.