Another early Preston photographer

Back in the autumn of 1861 a horse-drawn caravan arrived in Preston. It contained the fully-fitted studio of the photographer Samuel Oglesby, who established himself in the town as one of its principal early photographers.

John Garlington provided the following information: ‘He set up business from his caravan which was parked on an open area across from Fishergate Baptist Church and which is now occupied by Fishergate Centre.’

Samuel Oglesby - Preston photography advert
Oglesby’s advert bidding farewell to Preston: https://www.amounderness.co.uk/samuel_oglesby,_1823-1879…

It had been a long and circuitous journey for Samuel that stretched back to London by way of Tasmania.

In 1833, Samuel then aged 10, and his older brother had been arrested after breaking into a house in Paddington. They were transported to a prison colony in Tasmania to serve a seven-year sentence.

At the end of his sentence, Samuel stayed on in Australia, becoming a daguerreotype photographer, with a studio in Adelaide. He was one of Australiaโ€™s first photographers.

He returned to England in the early 1850s, touring the country with his caravan studio before settling in Bury St Edmonds. At this time, he adopted the new photographic technique of printing on paper, the technique he was using when he arrived in Preston.

He was active in Preston from 1861 until 1866, when he moved to Llandudno, where he continued to work as a photographer until his death, aged 55, in 1879.

Samuel Oglesby carte de visite
The 1862 Guild photographs shown in a ‘Carte de Viste displaying Guild portraits of prominent members of Preston Corporation’: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/4076445989/

In Preston, where he had a studio in Fishergate, he styled himself photographer to Queen Victoria. His self-promotion was clearly very successful for he was soon taking studio portraits of the great and the good of the town.

And a year after his arrival he was commissioned to photograph all the members of the corporation for the 1862 Preston Guild.

Richard Fenton's Crimean War caravan
Richard Fenton’s Crimean War caravan: https://britishphotohistory.ning.com/…/photographic…

Caravan studios such as Oglesbyโ€™s were commonly used by the early photographers, most notably by the photographer Roger Fenton, who used one while taking his famous photographs of the Crimean War. His caravan is pictured here.


Sources
https://www.amounderness.co.uk/samuel_oglesby,_1823-1879…
https://www.fadingimages.uk/photoO.asp
https://britishphotohistory.ning.com/…/photographic…


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