Portraits
Found in 112 Collections and/or Records:
Robert D. Adams negatives and prints
Materials include 720 prints and 534 corresponding negatives taken by Robert D. Adams between approximately 1930 and 1950. Photographs are primarily portraits of residents of Orderville, Utah. One photograph is of a family tree. There are also photographs of events and places in Orderville. There are also 47 woodcuts that are portraits of individuals.
William Harrison Ainsworth carte-de-visite
Carte-de-visite photograph of William Harrison Ainsworth, incribed by Ainsworth with a note to Charles Dickens dated February 8, 1866. Photograph dated approximately 1866.
George Edward Anderson photographs
Collection contains eight boxes containing 130 items, including black and white oversized prints of Utah printed from negatives by George Edward Anderson.
George Edward Anderson photographs of Icelanders
Contains five photographs of people who emigrated from Iceland to Utah. Portraits were taken by George Edward Anderson, circa 1890-1910. There is also a packet of pages that identifies the people in each of the photographs.
George Edward Anderson photographs of the Alberta Temple
William Andrews, Sr. family photographs
Collection contains four large (41 x 51 cm), black and white photographs. Includes portraits of William Andrews Sr., his wife, Ann Wright Andrews, William Littley, Jr. and his wife, Ann Bardsley Poxon Littley. Dates to approximately 1880.
Joseph E. Arrington photographs
Collection includes nine photographs, primarily gelatin silver prints. Also includes an embossed leather photograph album containing 18 albumen cartes-de-visite and one matte collodion cabinet card. Also includes one tintype of two men in top hats. The images include portraits and group photographs of family and friends. Dated approximately 1890-1979.
Autochrome portrait of a woman
Autochrome is a portrait of an older woman, enclosed in a metal case. The case is embossed with the phrase "E.J. Diascope Pat Sept. 1 1908".
Bartholomew family portraits
Collection consists of three oversize photographs of Kate Lublin Alexander, Hyrum Edward Hatton, and Inger Julina (Julia) Johnson Hatton.