Monday 31 December 2012

19th Century

The 19th century was the time of the Victorian era and the time of the industrial revolution, lots of different professions were developed further due to the discoveries made during this period. These discoveries also meant that civilization could grow such as the rise of the British Empire and the United States growing. This century is also where my specialist subject, photography, comes into play. The first recognizable camera was made during this era, which also kick started the film industry. A song from the Horrible Histories television tells of all the inventions during Queen Victoria's rein which was the majority of the19th century.

The 19th century was the time of discoveries and development because of one the most major discoveries made by one Charles Darwin. In 1859 Darwin published a book called On the Origin of Species which featured evidence that humans evolved from apes. This angered the church, the dominant power of the time, and scared many people of the time. All the inventors, and anyone who wanted to developed the human race, tried to show that we are very different from apes.
Along with people trying to further themselves in the 19th century, there were also people who were killing the human race. Two of the most famous serial killers during the 19th century were Jack the Ripper and Burke and Hare, all as vicious and nasty as each other. However, only one came to justice. Jack the Ripper murdered and mutilated at least 5 women prostitutes in the Whitechapel area between August and November 1888. Their names are well known in the history of crimes. Mary Ann Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes and Mary Jane Kelly. All five women suffered from deep throat slashes and mutilation of the genitals, some missing organs. The Ripper was never caught and the case remains open. Burke and Hare were not as gruesome as Jack the Ripper,but did have a higher body count, as many as 17 murders. Burke and Hare would murder their victims by getting them drunk and inviting them back to their lodgings. After the two men would smother and compress the victims chest, possibly by having one sitting on the victim's chest, till dead. The two men sold the bodies to Doctor Robert Knoxx, so Knoxx could deliver lectures on the human body. Knoxx paid for the bodies as the law at the time stated only bodies of condemned criminals could be used and rival lecturer Doctor Alexander Monro had a agreement with some people high up to have the bodies delivered to himself. Knoxx was not charged with anything to do with the murders, claiming not to know where the bodies were from and Hare was granted immunity if he confessed, blaming Burke. Burke was hung January 1829 and his body was dissected by Monro after being hung.
The Jack the Ripper murders are the ones that interest me as these victims had their photos taken for police records. However, these photographs were not the same as police photographs that are taken during crime scenes today. The photographer of the Ripper murders focused on the victims faces as they believed that the eyes of a victim held the face of the murderer. Thus if they photographed the face they could search their eyes for the victim. Only Mary Jane Kelly has photographs that show her body as it was found, the other four were mortuary photographs. Below are the photographs of the victims that were taken during the search, these were most likely taken with the first camera.
Victim 1 - Mary Ann Nichols
Victim 2 - Annie Chapman

Victim 4 - Catherine Eddowes


















Victim 3- Elizabeth Stride




















Victim 5 - Mary Jane Kelly

How people imagine Jack the Ripper in the modern world


















The use of photographing bodies was also used for the victims of the Titanic disaster in 1912. The bodies, once retrieved from the freezing sea were photographed then laid to rest. The photographs were then used for people to identify the unfortunate people who were lost on that night. This is also used in the modern day crime identification, though sometimes relatives are asked to see a photo of the body, or the body itself.
I have spoken of how photography was used during the 19th century, but nothing of how it came about. The first working camera that produced permanent images was made by Joseph Nicephore Niepce in 1826. Niepce's image was made on a plate that was exposed for as little as eight hours or as long as several days. This was the most successful of many attempts which has still survived today. The first successful attempt produced the image, however after continuous exposure to  white light, the positive image on the plate was reduced to darkness. Nicepce died in 1833 of a stroke, however he left his notes to his partner Louis Daguerre. Daguerre then started to refine different aspects of their technique such as the chemicals the plate was coated in and the chemicals he used to develop the plates. After this many different people helped refine the photography process to produce negatives as we know them today. Some people like Lewis Carroll, Robert Cornelius and William Henry Fox Talbot, who stabilized photography onto paper. Colour photography was explored after the inital photography technique was made, however it wasn't until 1861 by the scottish James Clerk Maxwell by playing with chemicals again. However, the first colour photograph wasn't made till the 20th century, which is were my post shall be based.
19th Century camera
Sources:
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/19th_century
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burke_and_Hare_murders
  • http://www.thejacktheripperwalk.com/history/
  • http://www.casebook.org/
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_camera
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_photography
  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1d_RFQn-_rM
  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pt2gHpqfZNA

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