Folk-Songs of America: The Robert Winslow Gordon Collection, 1922-1932
Gordon Collection Photographs
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Gordon and his music teacher. Although
he received professional instruction, Robert W. Gordon did
not consider himself a musician. In his correspondence, he
remarks on his inability to carry a tune--an opinion
his rendering of "Charlie Snyder" (B7) does not
substantiate. Bangor, Maine, ca. 1900. Photo courtesy Mr.
And Mrs. Bert Nye. |
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A prophetic photograph. Robert W. Gordon's
interest in technology emerged early. Here he appears to
play cards against himself in a double exposure; Gordon also
tripped the shutter. Bangor, Maine, ca. 1900. Photo courtesy
Mr. And Mrs. Bert Nye. |
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A family outing. While a student at
Phillips Exeter Academy (1902-06), Gordon (extreme left)
lived in the home of his aunt in Exeter, New Hampshire. This
is apparently a photograph from those times. Note that the
back row, where Gordon stands, seems to view picture taking
with some ceremony. The front row, with its maidens decked
in running pine, coffee pot sporting a hat, and barely suppressed
youth, sets a lighter tone. Photo courtesy Mr. And Mrs. Bert
Nye. |
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A family man. Robert W. Gordon seated
with daughter Roberta (Mrs. Bert Nye) on his lap. Standing,
from left to right, Gordon's mother-in-law, Mrs. Paul; wife,
Roberta; mother, Harriet; and family friend Josephine Brodeur.
Taken near Berkeley, California, ca. 1922. Photo courtesy
Mr. And Mrs. Bert Nye. |
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Robert Winslow Gordon in a portrait
taken in 1928, when he joined the staff of the Library of
Congress as the first Head of the Archive of American Folk
Song. Photo courtesy Mr. and Mrs. Bert Nye |
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First home of the Archive of Folk Song.
Robert W. Gordon is shown here in the southwest attic of
the Library of Congress building, ca. 1930. From left to
right: storage of manuscripts and recorded wax cylinders,
early microphone on floor stand, magnetic wire recorder on
table at left rear, rotary converter ("telephone" with
dial) to change the Library's DC current to AC for recording,
dictaphone cylinder recording machine (Gordon operating)
and, on the floor, a variety of cylinder machines and other
paraphernalia. Photo from the Harris and Ewing albums in
the Prints and Photographs Division of the Library of Congress. |
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Nancy Weaver Stikeleather, shown here
with her two children, was another folk music enthusiast
who contributed to Gordon's research. She and her husband
James (both may be heard on this LP) collected and sang songs
from the Asheville locality for Gordon and other scholars.
Photo courtesy of James Stikeleather, Jr. |
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Mountain informants, Bascom Lamar Lunsford,
shown here with his accompanist, Gertrude Johnson, was a
great help to Gordon's fieldwork in North Carolina. Lunsford
was an active tradition bearer, an amateur collector, a performer,
and the organizer of the Mountain Dance and Song Festival,
the first such event in the United States. Photo courtesy
of Loyal Jones. |
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