Panoramic Photographs

Selected Panoramic Photographs



Seeing Change Over Time: Duluth Minnesota, 1870-1913

City views are particularly interesting to historians because they can document the growth and change of an area over time. Panoramas of Duluth, Minnesota, dramatically show its development.

Panoramic view of Duluth, Minnesota in 1870
descriptive record icon enlarge image icon   Duluth in 1870; printed in 1902
Robert S. Gaylord
silver printing-out paper print; 6 x 42 in.
PAN US GEOG - Minnesota, no. 55 (E size) P&P

Panoramic view of Duluth, Minnesota businesses in 1870
descriptive record icon enlarge image icon   A Business view, (or card), of Duluth, Minnesota; looking waterward; taken December, 1870
Caswell & Davy
albumen silver print; 7 x 32 in.
PAN US GEOG - Minnesota, no. 51 (E size) P&P

Early photographs from 1870 show Duluth's beginnings after the Lake Superior and Mississippi railroad began operation between Duluth and St. Paul. In this photograph, land has been cleared and many wood frame buildings are under construction. Cut timber is stacked at one edge of town. A single grain elevator stands along the shore of Lake Superior.

Panoramic view of Duluth, Minnesota between 1886 and 1905
descriptive record icon enlarge image icon  Duluth, Minn., [between 1886 and 1905]
George A. Newton
albumen silver print; 4.5 x 41 in.
PAN US GEOG - Minnesota, no. 8 (E size) P&P

A view taken about twenty years later shows a more mature Duluth. The Lake Superior shoreline is dominated by several grain elevators and railroad lines. Brick and stone have replaced wood as the building materials of choice.

Panoramic view of Duluth, Minnesota showing the harbor
descriptive record icon enlarge image icon   [Bird's-eye view of Duluth showing harbor from Point of Rocks]; c1913
L. P. Gallagher
gelatin silver print; 12 x 69 in.
PAN US GEOG - Minnesota, no. 11 (F size) P&P

A later view taken in 1913 from Duluth's Point of Rocks also focuses on the Lake Superior shoreline. In the foreground, railroad tracks reveal the increasing importance of rail transportation. Duluth's aerial lift bridge is in the center of the panorama. An electrically-operated car, suspended from the overhead span, carried cars between Minnesota Point, the narrow stretch of land that extends into Lake Superior, and the mainland. Prior to the construction of this bridge, travelers used a ferry or a narrow footbridge that operated only in winter.

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