In the mid-1890s, a man named John Henry Tarbell moved from Massachusetts to Asheville, North Carolina to open a photography studio. According to Tarbell’s biography, the studio operated between 1896 and 1901 but some of the pictures are dated as far back as 1894. What’s certain is that in 1902 Tarbell returned to New England to live out his years.
These are some of the glass plate negatives in the John H. Tarbell Collection in the UNC archives. The images are unusually sharp and clear! If you click on the photos and zoom in, you can see fine details. The pictures were taken in Asheville and the immediate vicinity, but no one is identified by name.
It’s a curious collection when you consider that at the time, only people with means could afford to have pictures made. It’s evident that some families did have money but just as clear that others did not.
This little girl is picking flowers and looks pretty skeptical.
A little bit of camouflage in this picture:
Asheville is in western North Carolina, so this man may have been Cherokee.
He took several pictures of this man. He may have been a moderately prosperous farmer. In the first one, he’s rolling a wheelbarrow, accompanied by his dog. This is a very unusual picture for a studio photographer.
Next we find him reading the newspaper.
And finally, on what must have been a Sunday, dressed up, smoking his pipe, and whittling. He sure liked that hat!
I thought perhaps this was the farmer’s wife, but I doubt it. She looks a little too fancy for him. I’m curious about the cap and the bow around her neck. They look like they’re made of gauze!
This 1901 picture shows a smiling woman measuring the height of two small children. That little boy looks ornery!
These children are neat and clean and look well-fed, but the state of their clothes and shoes suggests they didn’t have very much.












I almost missed the little guy in the bushes! great pictures
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My younger brother was mischievous just like the little boy in the bushes.
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Aw I bet he was fun to grow up with!
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My favorite of these photographs is the one of the young woman seated at the piano studying her sheet music. Anyone who plays an instrument or learned to play an instrument can relate to the moment captured.
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It takes a lot of practice. The piano is such a beautiful instrument! If I were going to learn now, I’d learn the cello
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Most musical instruments require excellent hand dexterity. Piano, cello, trumpet, flute, etc. take time to develop the skills needed to play the instrument.
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Thank you! I missed the little boy in the bushes at first too!
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The Hat to his right sitting on the vegetation appears to be made of straw.
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Good eye!
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The children in the photos are so adorable! I love the glimpse into daily life that these photos give. I believe the bow around the elderly lady’s neck is possibly handmade lace that is well worn. Her cap does look like gauze, possibly to cover up thinning hair.
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I bet you’re right! Isn’t it amazing the level of detail visible in his pictures? They’re crystal clear!
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