To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jimmy Hare
Hare in 1913
Born
James H. Hare

(1856-10-03)3 October 1856
London, England
Died24 June 1946(1946-06-24) (aged 89)
OccupationPhotojournalist

James H. Hare (3 October 1856 – 24 June 1946) was an English photojournalist active between 1898 and 1931. He was the leading photographer during five major wars, and was the driving force behind Collier's becoming a large circulation magazine. Among other conflicts he covered, he photographed the Mexican Revolution (1910-20).[1]

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/1
    Views:
    395
  • Anne Tucker: Fellowship Recipient

Transcription

The photography collection at the Harry Ransom Center is one of the greatest in the world. And so I've probably looked at 20 or 30 different collections within the photography collection, ranging from the Jimmy Hare photographs of World War I to the Edward Steichen photographs of the Navy in World War II to Roger Fenton's photographs of Crimean War to the photographs in the Journal American Hearst newspaper. And the range of that, from the sensationalism of the American Journal approach to war to the very matter-of-fact reporting of Jimmy Hare, has been very useful to my research. To be able to look at the objects of the time in depth is an irreplaceable experience for understanding a time in which you didn't live. For instance, I looked at 300 Roger Fentons of the Crimean War, and a third of them, at least, are photographs of men and their horses. Then I realized that there's no difference in those men in the 1860s, 1850s standing next to their horses and a man in World War II standing next to his Jeep and a man in Iraq standing next to his Humvee. So looking at the depth of Fenton's decision to photograph all those men and their horses led me to an understanding I'm not sure I would have come to if I hadn't had that experience of understanding that for Roger Fenton, photographing these men and their horses was important. Then I thought, of course, it's the Charge of the Light Brigade. It's a cavalry. Their relationship to their horse is pivotal to their relationship to the war. So that's the value of an archive because it's not pre-edited. It's raw information about the time that hasn't been decided by somebody else what you should see. You are sitting there page by page, if you're going through documents, which I also have, or image by image if you're going through photographs, and you're putting together the pieces and the meaning of the totality of what you're seeing.

Early life

Hare was born in London to George Hare, who, after a successful cabinet making business, becomes a successful camera manufacturer. Hare attended St. John's College in London. He voluntarily left after one year and became an apprentice in his fathers camera shop.

In 1879, Hare and his father have a disagreement when he told his father that they should begin making smaller hand-held cameras, which were just becoming technologically feasible. Hare left his father's business to work for another London firm. On 2 August that year Hare married Ellen Crapper with whom he had five children.

Career

Cover of Collier's Weekly for 19 March 1898: "Memorial Service at Grave of Maine's Dead, Havana, March 4"
Scenes near Matanzas, Cuba, in Collier's Weekly (2 April 1898)

During the early 1880s Hare began to lose interest in camera manufacturing. He took up free-lance photography as a hobby and sold his work to various London journals.

In 1889, Hare became a technical adviser for E.& H.T. Anthony & Co., moving from London to Brooklyn, New York, where he lived for the rest of his life. He worked for a while as a free-lance photographer and in 1895, he became a full-time photographer for Illustrated American magazine.

On 15 February 1898, one month after a fire destroyed the Illustrated American headquarters, Hare presented himself at the office of Collier's Weekly proposing to photograph the wreckage of the battleship Maine, and life in Spanish Cuba. This was his first major job. He then captured images of the Spanish–American War (1898), which Collier's used to build support up for the controversial conflict. His intimate wartime photography was often cited as the reason Collier's circulation increased momentously. Other reporters with whom he worked at this time included Sylvester Scovel, Stephen Crane, and Richard Harding Davis.

After the Spanish–American War, Hare photographed four more wars: the Russo-Japanese War in 1904 and 1905, the Mexican Revolution in 1911 and 1914, the First Balkan War in 1912 and 1913, and World War I. He became known as the man who made the Russo-Japanese conflict famous, and was adored by his peers and contemporaries. In 1914, he learned that Collier's, his longtime employer, would not be sending him to Europe to cover World War I, so he contacted Leslie's Weekly to offer his services. He was hired by them and sent to England. Writers and photographers were often limited in their access to war fronts and had their writings and photos censored, but Hare was nevertheless a tirelessly tenacious photographer. During World War I he documented American, British, Canadian, and Italian soldiers, St Dunstan's home for blind soldiers, the Greek harbour town of Thessaloniki, the military hospital at the Hall of Mechanics at the Grand Palais in Paris, people fleeing Antwerp, funerals of the dead from the RMS Lusitania, and the American Ambulance Hospital at Neuilly-sur-Seine, among other subjects.

Other than photographing war, he took many notable photographs of aircraft evolution and early aviators, including the first photo by a journalist of an aircraft in flight in the US—the Wright Flyer III at the Kill Devil Hills in North Carolina in May 1908. (The Wright brothers had flown in 1903 but were wary of flying in front of spectators and reporters and Alberto Santos-Dumont had flown in public in 1906 in France.) He also documented American presidents, Boy Scouts, Haiti and other Latin American locations, and religious and archaeological sites in the Middle East.

Hare was profiled by The American Magazine in 1913 among its "interesting people", citing "the ability to catch the dramatic elements in the event he is picturing."

After 1922 Hare did little photography but lectured regularly. In 1929, Hare retired. In 1939, he was made the honorary president of the Overseas Press Club. On 24 June 1946, he died while staying with one of his daughters in Teaneck, New Jersey.

Hare's collection of negatives, prints, and lantern slides are at the Harry Ransom Center, at the University of Texas at Austin.

References

  1. ^ Debroise, Olivier. Mexican Suite: A History of Photography in Mexico. Austin: University of Texas Press 2001, pp. 177-78.

Sources

External links

Media related to Jimmy Hare at Wikimedia Commons

This page was last edited on 29 January 2024, at 03:53
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.