Transmissions from Turn of the Century Chapel Hill

It’s Independence Day!

The University of North Carolina’s digital photograph archive includes an album that once belonged to Elizabeth Tannahill Bain of Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Most of the photographs in the album are casual and depict a happy, peaceful, beautiful, and ordinary life in a small town.

A note in the album states that Elizabeth lived from 1893-1967 and gives her former address, as 407 East Rosemary Street (later the Delta Upsilon Fraternity House). Elizabeth’s father was a professor of Greek and Latin at the University of North Carolina, so we can probably assume the family had a comfortable life. They weren’t rich, but they were probably well off. Elizabeth served as department secretary to the Department of Romance Languages at the university.

Other than this fragment, all I know about Elizabeth Tannahill Bain I learned from looking at the album she left behind. In some of the pictures, people are named but unsurprisingly she doesn’t explain anyone’s relationship to herself. We don’t know if the people are neighbors, friends, or family members.

This picture says “Mrs. Durham and Elizabeth [Durham].”

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

These pictures were under the heading Portraits of Young People:

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

A group picture, but names are not specified.

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

Maybe this was the view from the front porch?

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

Billy Steele. A boyfriend, perhaps? He looks quite a bit older in the photograph on the left.

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

Burt, Theo, and Wort are in the photo on the left. “Wort” is Elizabeth’s brother, Charles Wortley. John Huke is in middle picture. The picture on the right looks like it was taken at a game or a race. These pictures are from 1915.
I wish men still dressed up like this.

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

Mr. and Mrs. Thornton, Summer School 1917. Elizabeth doesn’t identify them further, but she must have been involved with summer school too. There are several pictures of summer school labeled different years.
But only one with this delightful couple.

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

Elizabeth’s friends and family joined up after the United States was plunged into the Great War. The pictures on this page are from September 1917.

The picture on the left shows Elizabeth with Henry Johnson. The handwritten note beneath it says, “Henry Johnson killed on daylight patrol, at 10 o’clock on the morning the Armistice was signed at 12 noon.”
I wonder who Henry Johnson was to Elizabeth.

The other identifying notes say, “Wort in camp” (top); “Phil Woolcott” (man standing – bottom pictures). In the next column, a grinning soldier perched on the front step in front of a flag is labeled “Keysie.” Beneath that is another picture of Wort with more soldiers. On the right side of the page, an older man is walking on a dirt path with a cane. Beneath him is the name “Mr. Leonard.”

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

A group portrait on the front steps of the family home. Easter, 1920.

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

A couple of pictures of a “Mardi Gras Ball” costume party in 1923.

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

This group photo is labeled, left to right: Group portrait: Clara, Peekie, (Gerald) Mac McCarthy, Me, Elizabeth Durham, Mother, and Short Change.  How did Short Change get that nickname? I love it!

Elizabeth is sitting almost in the middle of the photo. She looks like someone you’d want to be friends with.

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

 

This undated photo is labeled “Dirt road, on/near UNC campus?”
I love turns in the road. They’re evocative of an idea that the people in these pictures are still with us, just out of sight.

Digital North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives

These photographs pull at my heart. I feel like I could project myself into these old pictures and disappear into their world.

By the way, do you say Fourth of July or Independence Day?

6 thoughts on “Transmissions from Turn of the Century Chapel Hill

  1. What a great “snap shot” of the past. I mentally compare the subjects and composition of these photos to those taken with a modern cell phone. The “selfie!” The subjects are not holding a “little red cup” of beer, smoking or acting strangely. The subjects look as though they are enjoying the moment, the place and the “time” without any stimulation or stimulant.

    Modern people believe that they have it so much better than their great-grandparents or grandparents. I not so sure that is the case.

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  2. I always say 4th of July. Happy Fourth to America!!! I love these photos! Elizabeth captured the carefree youth of her times and always with a smile. She loved life and loved her friends and family. I think many of us can relate to these photos showing happy life before the uniforms of World War One started appearing in every home. The photo of her friend that was killed just before the Armistice has been memoralized. Then we see photos of life happily going forward. That’s what our founding fathers and all of those who have given their lives for us fought for. They want us to go forward in freedom and safety. I feel so blessed to have been born an American and smile with happiness going forward, just like Elizabeth.

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