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Lawrence Denny Lindsley Photographs, approximately 1890-1963

Overview of the Collection

Photographer
Lindsley, Lawrence Denny, 1878-1975
Title
Lawrence Denny Lindsley Photographs
Dates
approximately 1890-1963 (inclusive)
Quantity
approximately 5,000 images
Collection Number
PH0548
Summary
Landscape and nature photography of Laurence Denny Lindsley. During his career as a photographer, woodsman, wilderness guide, and miner, Lindsley took thousands of photographs of Washington State, including scenes around Mount Rainier and the Cascade Mountains, Eastern Washington, and the Pacific Ocean beaches on the Olympic Peninsula. Using a discerning eye, Lindsley captured images of extraordinary geologic formations in the Grand Coulee region, cloud formations, mountain storms, wildflowers, and historic images of steamboats and settlements around Lake Chelan
Repository
University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections
University of Washington Libraries
Box 352900
Seattle, WA
98195-2900
Telephone: 2065431929
Fax: 2065431931
speccoll@uw.edu
Access Restrictions

Selections can be viewed on the Libraries' Digital Collections website. Permission of Visual Materials Curator is required to view originals. Contact Special Collections for more information.

Request at UW

Languages
English
Sponsor
Funding for processing this collection was provided by the Pendleton and Elisabeth Miller Charitable Foundation.
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Biographical Note

Lawrence Denny Lindsley was born on March 18, 1878 in a house overlooking Lake Union. He was the eldest grandchild of Seattle pioneers and founders, Louisa (Boren) and David T. Denny. His parents were Abbie (Denny) and Edward L. Lindsley. As a child and young adult, he grew up in the “great outdoors.” Lindsley spent a lot of time at his grandfather’s side, learning to hunt deer on the summit of Queen Anne Hill in Seattle, and cultivating a woodsman’s keen power of observation and an artist’s appreciation for nature. He took up photography at an early age, and later, combined it with work as a miner, trail guide, and naturalist. In 1895, Lindsley went to work in the Esther mines near Gold Creek in the Snoqualmie Pass area. In 1899, he assisted his grandfather, Denny, who was contracted by King County to improve the existing wagon road along Lake Keechelus. Lindsley was not fond of the mining life and the labor it entailed: building cabins, drilling and hammering, and packing out ore by an arduous journey across Snoqualmie Pass to Seattle. Even so, he describes his excitement at getting up in the middle of a night storm to photograph images of "lightning rumbling against the mountains." Lawrence Lindsley in cabin kitchen baking bread, Lake Chelan, ca. 1910 Lawrence Lindsley in cabin kitchen, ca. 1910

Lindsley became a charter member of the Mountaineers in 1907. He went to work for the W. P. Romans Photographic Studio in Seattle in 1903, and owned part interest in the studio when it was bought by Asahel Curtis in 1910. This association led him to work with Edward Curtis, for whom Lindsley developed some of the color negatives, “the gold tones,” for Curtis’s famous "Indians of North America" series.

In about 1912, Lindsley moved to his parents’ ranch along 25 Mile Creek at Lake Chelan. In 1916, he was employed by the Great Northern Railroad to photograph Glacier National Park for the railroad’s tourist literature. He also began his extensive photographic study of Lake Chelan and the coulees of Central Washington, often photographing the landscape on horseback while hand-holding a tripod. In these Chelan years and later, Lindsley worked as a guide, leading parties along the lake and into the Stehekin wilderness. Also in 1916, the railroad sent him as a guide for the party of Mary Roberts Rinehart, a popular author, on a packing trip through the North Cascades. In her novel, "Tenting Tonight," Lindsley figured prominently as the character”Silent Lawrie,” along with his faithful horse Peanut.

In 1916, Lindsley returned to Seattle and resumed work in the Asahel Curtis Studio. He married Pearl A. Miller in 1918, but his wife and infant daughter died in 1920. Throughout the 1920s, Lindsley worked for the Curtis Studio and continued his own landscape and nature photography. During this time, he perfected the technique of lantern slide photography. Lindsley liked to blend one frame into another, taking as many as eleven shots to capture, sequentially, cloud movements, birds nesting, or waves breaking on a shore. He mastered the blending of frames in the thousands of pictures he took of Mt. Rainier, the Lake Chelan region, and the beach at La Push, Washington. During his lifetime, Lindsley probably photographed Mount Rainier more often than any other photographer. In 1933, when the Washington State Federation of Garden Clubs was formed, his lantern slide lectures became a favorite among members of the garden clubs. Lindsley continued to use colored lantern slides throughout his career.

Lindsley married for a second time in 1944. He and his wife, Sarah Sonju, a color artist, created many photographic works of art from the shop in their Wallingford home in Seattle until her death in 1960. Unable to support himself solely by photography, Lindsley supplemented his income by selling postcards, prints, slides and murals, but also by renting rooms of his home to boarders, and finding odd jobs as he could, including a stint as night watchman in the 1950s. Lindsley continued to photograph into his 90s, always with an eye toward his next project. He died at home at age 96, on January 3, 1975.

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Content Description

This collection represents the landscape and nature photography of Laurence Denny Lindsley. During his career as a photographer, woodsman, wilderness guide, and miner, Lindsley took thousands of photographs of Washington State, including scenes around Mount Rainier and the Cascade Mountains, Eastern Washington, and the Pacific Ocean beaches on the Olympic Peninsula. Using a discerning eye, Lindsley captured images of extraordinary geologic formations in the Grand Coulee region, cloud formations, mountain storms, wildflowers, and historic images of steamboats and settlements around Lake Chelan. Also included are family pictures Lindsley collected of his relatives, the Denny family, one of Seattle’s earliest pioneer families. Presented here in digital format is only a selection of the more than 5,000 images in the Lawrence D. Lindsley Photograph Collection.

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Use of the Collection

Alternative Forms Available

View selections from the collection in digital format

Restrictions on Use

Restrictions might exist on reproduction, quotation, or publication. Contact the repository for details.

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Administrative Information

Processing Note

Processed by Caitlin Oiye, 2005. [Collection is only partially processed]

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Detailed Description of the Collection