Old Church at Jamestown, Virginia view, photochrome print postcard.

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Old Church at Jamestown, Virginia view, photochrome print postcard.

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Copyright 1902 by Detroit Photographic Co.

Title on inventory list: Old Church at Jamestown.
Caption on similar image (LC-D4-14191) lists title as: Old Church, Jamestown, Va.
Detroit Publishing Co. no. "53851".
Forms part of: Photochrom Print Collection.
More information about the Photochrom Print Collection is available at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.pgz

English efforts to settle a colony in America were not successful. In 1606, King James I granted a charter to a new venture, the Virginia Company, to form a settlement in North America. Virginia, named Elizabeth I, the “virgin queen,” was the English name for the entire eastern coast of North America north of Florida. The Virginia Company sent three ships (the Susan Constant, the Godspeed and the Discovery) in search for gold and silver, as well as a river route to the Pacific Ocean. On May 14, 1607, a group of 100 members of the Virginia Company founded the first permanent English settlement in North America on the banks of the James River. The new settlement consisted of a wooden fort built in a triangle around a storehouse for weapons and other supplies, a church and a number of houses. Famine, disease, and conflict with local tribes brought Jamestown to the brink of failure before the arrival of a new group of settlers and supplies in 1610. A period of peace due to the marriage of colonist John Rolfe to Pocahontas, the daughter of an Algonquian chief, followed. Tobacco became Virginia’s first export and Jamestown expanded and remained the capital of the Virginia colony until 1699. Pocahontas’ death during a trip to England in 1617 and the death of her father in 1618 strained the already fragile peace between the English settlers and the Native Americans. The Algonquians became angry about the colonists’ need for land. In March 1622, the Powhatan made an assault on English settlements in Virginia, killing up to 400 residents (or one-quarter of the population). Soon, King James I dissolved the Virginia Company and made Virginia into an official crown colony, with Jamestown as its capital. In 1698, the central statehouse in Jamestown burned down, and Williamsburg replaced it as the colonial capital.

Photochrome is a process for producing colorized images from black-and-white photographic negatives via the direct photographic transfer of a negative onto lithographic printing plates. The process was invented in the 1880s and was most popular in the 1890s.

The Detroit Publishing Company was started by publisher William A. Livingstone and photographer Edwin H. Husher. ln 1905 that the company called itself the Detroit Publishing Company. The best-known photographer for the company was William Henry Jackson, who joined the company in 1897. The company acquired exclusive rights to use a form of photography processing called Photochrom. Photochrom allowed for the company to mass-market postcards and other materials in color. We at GetArchive are admirers of their exceptional high-resolution scans of glass negatives collection from the Library of Congress. By the time of World War I, the company faced declining sales both due to the war economy and the competition from cheaper, more advanced printing methods. The company declared bankruptcy in 1924 and was liquidated in 1932.

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Date

01/01/1902
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Detroit Photographic Co.
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Library of Congress
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