Creator |
Richards & Betts, photographer. |
Contributor |
Holden, Isaac, -1884, architect. |
|
Poulson, Charles A. 1789-1866, collector. |
Title |
Ruins of museum building. Ninth below Chestnut Street. [graphic]. |
Publisher |
[Philadelphia] |
Publisher |
PA. Philadelphia. 1854 |
Date |
July 1854 |
Physical Description |
1 photograph : salted paper ; sheet 15 x 19 cm (6 x 7.5 in.) |
Description |
Photograph depicting the fire ruins of the Philadelphia Museum known as the Chinese Museum built circa 1836-1838 after the
designs of Isaac Holden at Ninth and Sansom Streets. Shows partial fragments of the brick walls left standing. Bricks and
debris are visible on the ground. The Museum served as an exhibition space, including the display of Nathan Dunn's Chinese
artifact collection, and as a concert, public meeting, and lecture space until razed by fire on July 5, 1854.
|
Notes |
Title from Poulson inscription. |
|
Date inferred from content. |
|
Attributed to Richards & Betts. |
|
Originally part of a series of eleven scrapbooks compiled by Philadelphia antiquarian Charles A. Poulson in the late 1850s
entitled "Illustrations of Philadelphia" unidentified volume, page 13b. The scrapbooks contained approximately 120 photographs
by Philadelphia painter and pioneer photographer Richards of 18th-century public, commercial, and residential buildings in
the city of Philadelphia commissioned by Poulson to document the vanishing architectural landscape
|
|
Retrospective conversion record: original entry, edited. |
|
Reproduced in Kenneth Finkel's Nineteenth century photography in Philadelphia (New York: Dover Publications, Inc. in cooperation
with the Library Company of Philadelphia, 1980), entry #158.
|
|
Reproduced in The Print and Photograph Department of the Library Company of Philadelphia's Center City Philadelphia in the
19th century (Portsmouth, N.H.: Arcadia Publishing, 2006), p. 14.
|
|
Arcadia caption text: The Chinese Museum, built 1836-1838 after the designs of English architect Isaac Holden, was a veritable
multi-use venue. The two-story marble building exhibited Nathan Dunn’s impressive collection of wax figures dressed in authentic
Chinese clothing set amidst Chinese furniture, decorations, and rooms along with the Philadelphia Museum Company’s holdings
of artist Charles Willson Peale’s collection of paintings, bones, stuffed animals, and curiosities. Between 1842 and 1844
both museums left the building due to decreased attendance and profits, but the space at the northeast corner of Ninth and
Sansom streets capable of holding 8,000 people continued to host balls, political conventions, plays, lectures, public meetings,
and exhibitions, such as the Exhibition of American Manufactures sponsored by the Franklin Institute, pictured above in October
1844. The smoldered remains of the building are shown below, after a devastating fire destroyed it on July 5, 1854.
|
Biographical / historical note |
Richards & Betts was a partnership between Frederick DeBourg Richards and John Betts circa 1854-1857. |
Subject |
Dunn, Nathan, 1782-1844. |
|
Chinese Museum (Philadelphia, Pa.) |
|
Philadelphia Museum (Philadelphia, Pa.) |
|
Debris -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia. |
|
Fires -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia. |
|
Galleries & museums -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia. |
|
Museum objects -- Chinese. |
|
Ruins -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia. |
|
AAPI. |
Geographic subject |
Ninth Street (Philadelphia, Pa.) -- South -- 100 block. |
Genre |
Salted paper prints -- 1850-1860. |
Provenance |
Poulson, Charles A. (Charles Augustus), 1789-1866, collector. |
Location |
Library Company of Philadelphia| Print Department | photo - Richards - Fires [(5)2526.F.13b] |
Accession number |
(5)2526.F.13b |