Photographs: Subjects, c. 1850s-Present | Oberlin College Archives
32/1 Students: World War I
32/2 Miscellaneous Photographs
32/3 Portraits
32/4 Buildings
32/6 Negatives
32/7 Photograph Albums
32/8 Hi-O-Hi Yearbook Photographs
32/9 Slides
32/10 Oversize Photographs
32/11 Panorama and Rolled Miscellaneous Photographs
32/12 View Books and Other Publications
Other Collections with Photographs
6 Business and Finance
9/3 Allen Memorial Art Building
9/6 Physical Education Department
10 Conservatory of Music
15 Oberlin Shansi Memorial Association
18 Office of Communications
30 Personal Papers
36 Postcards
40 Paintings, Drawings, Prints and Other Framed Items
41 College Archives
See also Oberlin College Archives digital collections at: http://www.oberlin.edu/archive/digital/index.html
This grouping, arranged by subject, holds the largest numbers of photographic prints in the Oberlin College Archives. The bulk of them are 8” x 10” or smaller, and are stored vertically in file cabinet drawers. Older, more fragile prints are stored separately in records cartons and require more careful handling. The subject headings were locally derived and do not adhere to any controlled vocabulary.
The older prints, dating from the 1850s to the later 1910s, were produced by independent photographers in the region. In 1917 a College Photographer position was created for Arthur Ludwig Princehorn. He and his son Arthur Ewing Princehorn produced nearly all of the college’s negatives and photographs from 1917 to 1969 (see the Princehorn Family Papers, RG 30/416). The prints for this period were derived from negatives kept by the college photographers and noted on a log sheet by year. Other photographers were retained for special assignments, such as the All-College Photographs and illustraions for the yearbook. Later the College used photographers working in the college’s Communications Office, or local commercial photographers, and negatives were not systematically recorded or kept. During the 1980s and 1990s color slides were frequently used, and prints were only made on demand. In some cases photographs were taken by professionals outside the Northeast Ohio region. Sometimes photographers’ names or firm names appear stamped or inscribed on the backs of prints.
Beginning in the early 2000s, campus offices and individuals documented the College with digital cameras. As of 2018, this represents a small number of photographs in this group. The subjects represented in born digital photographs are indicated on the inventory. If reference CD-ROMs are available for these subjects, they can be viewed on a public access computer in the reading room.
The subject heading "Visitors to Campus” lists names and dates for the visits. These include John Cage, Shirley Chisholm, Ralph Nader, Odetta, Pete Seeger, Gloria Steinem, Mark Twain, and many other famous persons. Sound or moving image recordings from these visits may be available.