William Henry Jackson (1843-1942)


The following chronology highlights Jackson's career and some key events in the history of photography.

1839
Invention of photography.

1843
William Henry Jackson born in Keeseville, New York.

1851
Collodion wet-plate glass negatives introduced.

1867
Jackson opens a photography studio in Omaha, Nebraska.

1870-1878
Jackson begins photographing the landscape of the Rockies, especially the Yellowstone area and Colorado, for Francis V. Hayden's Geological and Geographic Survey of the Territories.

1879
Gelatin dry plates become commercially available in the United States.
Jackson opens a photography studio in Denver.

1889
Eastman begins production of nitro-cellulose film.

1890-1892
Jackson photographs for various railroad lines, including the Mexican Central, Baltimore & Ohio, and New York Central, using 18x22-inch glass plate negatives.

1893
Jackson's photographs commissioned by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad are exhibited at the World's Columbian Exposition.

1894-1896
Jackson photographs for the World's Transportation Commission.

1897-1924
Jackson joins the Detroit Photographic Company. His negatives become the basis for the Company's postcard and photographic view business.

1942
Jackson dies in New York City.


WTC Photos Home Page