Tag Archives: Richmond

Walking on Broad (Street)

I went down to Richmond, Virginia over President’s Day weekend back in February to take a mini-vacation. I brought along my then new-to-me Pentax 67 and my trusty Lomo Belair X/6-12. Thank heaven I brought the Lomo along because I managed to get one and a half rolls out of the Pentax before the battery died and the mirror locked up. It’s going to be going off to the repair shop soon. What I did get out of the Pentax was brilliant, and I’ll share those in another post. So I at least had one working camera with me, even if it is a rather specialized one, and I made the best out of the situation and shot an entire trip in panorama mode.

One evening I took the camera out and did some twilight shots – all hand-held, along Broad Street in downtown Richmond. The Lomo is very good for that kind of shooting, and I apparently have hands of steel when it comes to doing slow shutter speeds. The Lomo doesn’t tell you what speed it’s using, but some of these shots were anywhere between 1/15th and 1 second. I tried one or two that went past 1 second but I’m not THAT good.

Broad Street is the main axis street through Richmond – it starts near the Virginia Capitol building and heads west, running for miles out into the Richmond suburbs. These shots were all taken within a few blocks of each other, around the East/West Broad dividing line.

The above image was a happy accident- a triple exposure of the theater building, the bus station, and the window of Tarrant’s, a turn of the 20th century drugstore turned New Southern cuisine restaurant (and the home of my absolute favorite chicken-n-waffles anywhere so far! … well, the Jefferson Hotel in Richmond did them better, but they don’t offer it on their menu any more, BOO HISS…)

West Broad was once the commercial and business heart of Richmond, and like so many urban centers in the second half of the 20th century, it took a downturn. Now it is being revived with art galleries and artists studios, boutique businesses and hotels, and upscale condos and loft apartments. For those who love urban grit, though, there’s plenty of that left if you want it.

People-watching, Virginia Museum of Fine Art

Hall, lounge chairs, VMFA
Hall, lounge chairs, VMFA

Patrons, VMFA
Patrons, VMFA

Formal Dining Room, VMFA
Formal Dining Room, VMFA

Staircase, VMFA
Staircase, VMFA

Café, VMFA
Café, VMFA

I realize there are no people in the staircase shot so it’s not technically people-watching, but it’s part of the same space, and in a way the absence of people can be about the interaction of people with a space in the same way that people in the frame can be. All photos were taken with my Contax G2 and the 90mm and 21mm lenses. Film used was Kodak Ektar 100.

The Infamous Confederate Prison – Libby Prison, Richmond, VA

Here is a previously undocumented photograph of Libby Prison in Richmond, Virginia. The second-most infamous prisoner-of-war camp in the Confederacy (after Andersonville), it housed Union officers and had an appallingly high mortality rate. For more information on the prison and its history, check: Libby Prison.

This view is most probably post-war, as most of the photos of the building even in 1865 show the whitewash on the lower levels as intact, and the Libby Prison sign in place hanging over the downhill sidewalk from the upper street facade.

Libby Prison, Richmond, VA
Libby Prison, Richmond, VA

After the fall of Richmond to Union forces, the prison was used to house Confederate officer prisoners of war, this time with greatly improved physical conditions to include windows with panes in them. Later, it became a museum, and was even dismantled and re-assembled in Chicago, but when it failed as a tourist attraction, the materials of the building were sold off as souvenirs.

As you can see the image was exposed to fire at some point, with scorching around the edges. I’m guessing the age to be between 1870-1880.

Here is a photo from the National Archives that shows the prison in 1865.

Libby Prison, NARA image, from Wikipedia
Libby Prison, NARA image, from Wikipedia