The Longmont Museum (Longmont, Colorado) is presenting a program featuring early photographs of Longmont on Thursday, February 29 at 7 pm in the Museum’s Stewart Auditorium. Director Erik Mason and the museum’s new Curator of History Elizabeth Beaudoin will show images selected from the Museum’s photo archive.

The program is presented in conjunction with the Museum’s “Picturing the West” exhibition. The show comprises 48 images from the collection of Michael Mattis and Julia Hochberg– mostly albumen prints, including mammoth, double-mammoth, and even triple-mammoth plates. They are some of the most sumptuous photographs to survive from the Era of Exploration and provide a rare opportunity to compare the photographers’ approaches to capturing the “sublime” in the unspoiled Western landscape.
Featured are nineteen photographs by Carleton E. Watkins, eight by William H. Jackson, and four by Eadweard Muybridge. Other artists include William Bell, Henry Hamilton Bennett, Frank Jay Haynes, John Hillers, Thomas Johnson, Timothy O’Sullivan, William Rau, and Charles Savage. Andrew J. Russell’s rare album The Great West is also on display.
I see only this one reference to C. W. Boynton, photographer and editor of the Longmont Ledger in the late 1800s and early 1900s. He was noteworthy because he was almost the only person documenting the Allenspark, Colorado area. If you’d like more information, I’ve kinda fallen in love with him and have done a lot of research.
Edie DeWeese, Allenspark historian
https://www.19thcenturycoloradophotographers.com/uncategorized/picturing-longmont-lecture#respond
Let me know if you would like to partner on a blog post about Boynton.