Among the many collections that make up the
Audio-Visual Department of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential
Library, the Guy Mathis photographic collection stands out for its
unparalleled documentation of turn-of-the-century Springfield,
particularly the downtown area. The approximately 1,700 images are
a fascinating visual chronicle of a fairly narrow window of time
— roughly 1899-1905.
Mathis, who traveled in a smart social set,
captured both interior and exterior views of many of
Springfield’s grand homes, including the Executive Mansion,
and the people who lived in them. The collection features many
images of Illinois National Guardsmen, taken during their annual
summer encampments at Camp Lincoln, as well as pictures of the
state fair, Washington Park, local businesses, and prominent
citizens and politicians, including the May 1901 funeral of Gov.
John Tanner and the October 1902 visit of President Theodore
Roosevelt.
The young, ambitious, and entrepreneurial
Mathis came to Springfield in the late 1880s from Princeton, Ill.,
the county seat of Bureau County, where his father was engaged in
the mercantile business. On arriving here, he established himself
as a clerk in the B.H. Ferguson China Shop, at the corner of Sixth
and Monroe streets, which, according to Ferguson’s 1903
obituary, was the largest and best china and glassware store in
central Illinois. It was a move that characterized Mathis’
entire career — he set his standards high and allied himself
only with the finest-quality brand names in his every business
endeavor. He was also Springfield’s first automobile dealer,
selling Cadillacs.
Ferguson was the president of the Marine Bank,
and he hired Joseph F. Boyd to manage the china shop. Ferguson, who
himself had cut his teeth as a teenager clerking in brother-in-law
Jacob Bunn’s dry-goods store, apparently was close with both
Boyd and Mathis, in a paternal way, in his own little fiefdom on
North Fifth Street, near Edwards Place.
Ferguson’s grand house, the site of
which is now a vacant lot (where he and Mrs. Ferguson entertained
President Roosevelt at a luncheon party in 1902) stood at 815 N.
Fifth St. The Boyd family lived at No. 821, Mathis at No. 823. It
wasn’t long after moving in, however, that Mathis won the
heart of the girl next door (who just happened to be the
boss’s daughter), and he and Grace Boyd were married at the
Boyd family home on May 28, 1891. The house, which still stands,
was Mathis’ home for the rest of his life.
Mathis was content to clerk in the china shop
until 1896, when he founded the Springfield Camera Co. at the
corner of Fifth and Monroe streets. His store, the first of its
kind in the city, carried a full line of Kodaks and other cameras
and all the supplies needed by both professional and amateur
photographers, as well as complete developing and finishing
services.
The business of photography wasn’t the easy
point-and-shoot undertaking that it is today. When one considers what a
cumbersome, tedious, and time-consuming process it was to produce a
photograph, Mathis’ technical precision, artful eye and sheer
professionalism become that much more apparent (although photography
was fast evolving at that time; the Kodak “Brownie” was
introduced in 1900 and sold for a dollar).
“His is the best turn-of-the-century
collection that we have,” says Mary Michals, audiovisual
curator of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library. “Whether
it was people or buildings, he selected beautiful
subjects.”
In a story headlined “Expert with a
Camera” in the Springfield News of Sept. 10, 1902, Mathis described the
attributes of photographers who seek to produce art:
“The great trouble with
nine-tenths of the amateur photographers is that they do not
persevere. They are satisfied with taking a picture and turning out something that looks like the
object snapped. They get a photographer to complete their work and are
suited. They do not get the real pleasure out of the work. The other
tenth go into it for all they are worth and the result is that very
soon they are turning out really artistic productions.
“The more artistic a person is by
nature, the better the photograph is likely to be, the amount of
work being the same in all cases. The artistic eye will pick out
the artistic scene on land or water. It will arrange a group or a
figure so that the lights and shadows are just right and will
direct the posing to the advantage of the entire picture.”
This article appears in Feb 24 – Mar 2, 2005.
