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Early Office Museum

 Vintage Office Photographs 
~ 1904-1907 ~

When no date is provided in the Description column below, we do not know the date of the photograph.  
We have placed undated photographs in their likely chronological order.
If the source in the right-hand column is anything other than "Early Office Museum Archives," 
we do not have the ability to grant permission for use or to provide a high resolution image..

Click Image to Enlarge Description Source
Beck nd 2991 prob. 1890s.JPG (64094 bytes) Office with letter copying press, stuffed owl, and gas heater. Ronald Beck
1904_President_Joseph_F_Smith_1901-18_and_Counsellors_Lund__Winder_of_Church_of_LDS.jpg (112847 bytes) President Joseph F. Smith (left), 2nd Counselor Anthon H. Lund (center), and 1st Counselor John R. Winder, Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, stereoview, copyright Underwood & Underwood 1904. Aside from the copyright date, the photo must date from 1901-1910. All three men were appointed to these positions in 1901 and held these positions until 1910, when Winder died. The machine in the foreground is an American dating stamp, which was patented in 1871-76 and sold until at least 1913. Early Office
Museum Archives
Four_women_working_in_office.jpg (77687 bytes) Four women in office with document files. Private Collection
1905 Minnesota pf023867 v.JPG (55341 bytes) Five employees using Multigraph machines, 1905. Gammeter Multigraphs, introduced by the American Multigraph Sales Co. in 1902, were used to produce form letters that looked as though they were individually typed. Minnesota Historical Society, Neg. No. 7636.
1905_Office_Three_Men_One_Women_Document_Cabinet_OM.jpg (262660 bytes) Office with three men and a woman, 1905.  A telephone mouthpiece is mounted on a long tube that presumably was swung back and forth so that it could be shared by the men who seated on opposite sides of the partners' desk.  There is a large document file.  The photo was dated by a wall calendar.  Early Office
Museum Archives
Click on link at right to see photo. Click the "Back" button on your browser to return here. Office of Pope Manufacturing Co., Hartford, CT, c. 1905. Pope Manufacturing made Columbia bicycles and, around 1890, also made World index typewriters. Connecticut History Online
Office_with_slant-top_desks_OM.jpg (128703 bytes) Office with clerks working at slant-top standing desks. Private collection.
A_Negro_Magazine_Editors_Office_in_Philadelphia_Baker_Following_the_Color_Line_1908_p.138_OM.JPG (86776 bytes) "A Negro Magazine Editor's Office in Philadelphia," c. 1904-07.  Writing about employment conditions in Northern cities, the author states "A good many Negro printers, pressmen, and the like are now found in Negro offices (over 200 newspapers and magazines are published by Negroes in this country).  I know of several girls (all mulattoes) who occupy responsible positions in offices in New York and Chicago." Ray Stannard Baker, Following the Color Line, 1908, p. 138.
1904_Larkin_Building_F.L.Wright_Buffalo_NY_OM.jpg (60090 bytes)

Larking_Building_Interior_F_L_Wright.jpg (26399 bytes)

Office_Next_to_Light_Court_Larkin_Bldg_Buffalo_BECHS.jpg (183429 bytes)
Larkin Administration Building, Buffalo, NY.  The building's architect was Frank Lloyd Wright. The Larkin Company was a mail-order house that sold soap and other household products.

The top photograph shows the atrium c. 1906.  The bottom photo shows a room beside the atrium c. 1930.

The building was demolished in 1950.

Private collections (top two) and Buffalo & Erie County Historical Society (bottom)
1906 OM Office of Homestead PA glass products co. 1906.JPG (38348 bytes) "Jennie Kelso, Uncle John Higbee, His Office in Pitts," Pennsylvania, 1906. Date from wall calendars. The company's glass products are visible on the table in the foreground and on top of the desk in the background. A city map on the wall is labeled "Homestead." A letter copying press rests on a stool. Early Office
Museum Archive
1906_Large_Office_W._D._McALLISTER_BUKA_DEPT_Photographer_Lawrence_Co_Chicago_OM.jpg (27512 bytes) Large office, photograph created by the Lawrence Co., Chicago, IL, 1906.  Someone has written on the back: "W. D. McAllister, BUKA DEPT." [Rescan and replace] Early Office
Museum Archives
Sears23 Making a Record of the Customer's Order OM.jpg (26036 bytes) "Making a Record of the Customer's Order," No. 23 in a boxed set of 50 stereographs entitled "A Trip Through Sears, Roebuck & Co.," Chicago, Ill., 1906. The set of stereographs is advertised with a 1906 date in the 1908 Sears, Roebuck catalog.  Sears, Roebuck employed nearly 2,500 clerical workers in its administration building. The stereograph card reverse states, "During the busy season of the year, six hundred young women are employed in this room, the picture showing only a portion of this great office. The work of transcribing customers' orders to merchandise order tickets is performed on special typewriters, four hundred of these typewriters being in use at the present time."  Early Office
Museum Archive
Sears26 Stenographic Dept OM.jpg (27367 bytes) "Stenographic Department," No. 26 in a boxed set of 50 stereographs entitled "A Trip Through Sears, Roebuck & Co.," Chicago, Ill., 1906. Reverse states, "In this room between one hundred and fifty and two hundred young women are engaged in transcribing letters dictated by correspondents throughout the institution. This dictation is received by two methods. By one method the typist goes directly to the correspondent and takes his dictation in shorthand. By the other method the correspondents dictate their letters to a graphophone. The cylinders are then sent by messenger to the graphophone division of the Stenographic Department, where each operator has a graphophone and typewriter." Typists are using Oliver typewriters. Early Office
Museum Archive
Section_of_Mail_Opening_T_Eaton_Co_Winnipeg_Canada_OM.jpg (386725 bytes) "Section of Mail Opening," from a stereoview series showing various operations of The T. Eaton Co. Ltd, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.  Eaton's, which was founded in Toronto in 1869 and went bankrupt in 1999, was Canada's largest retail department store chain.  The company introduced a mail order catalog service in 1884.  In 1905, it opened a store, and catalog fulfillment business aimed at Western Canada, in Winnipeg. "This picture shows a small section of our mail opening staff, of which there are about 45, including cashiers.  Here all our mail is received.  The mail order letters are opened by a machine which is capable of opening letters ten times as fast as could be done by the old fashioned hand method.  The letters are then given to the mail openers who carefully read them, check the amount of money received, and make out a cash tally showing the amount enclosed.  In addition a record card is made out, showing customer's name, post office, station, province, amount of money remitted, and order number.  Thousands of letters are handled daily."  See also the following photograph. Early Office
Museum Archive
Section_of_Copying_T._Eaton_Co._Winnipeg_Canada_OM.jpg (378756 bytes) "Section of Copying," The T. Eaton Co. Ltd, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.  See the discussion of the preceding photo for background on Eaton's.  "...[F]rom 100 to 175 young women are here employed.  When the mail openers have opened the letters, and the cashiers have taken off the money, the young lady receiving your letter carefully reads it and makes abstracts on the order sheets for goods from each department.  Every hour these orders are sent to the proper departments and your original letter along with our shipping record is sent to the transfer or assembling section.  [The goods] are sent here and connected with the original order, which, when complete, is sent to the packers." Early Office
Museum Archive
Recording_Department_The_T_Eaton_Co_Toronto_ON.jpg (380841 bytes) "Recording Department," The T. Eaton Co. Ltd., Toronto, Ontario, Canada.  The T. Eaton Co. had mail order offices and warehouses in both Toronto and Winnipeg in the early 1900s.  See the two photographs immediately above.  Early Office
Museum Archives
1906_Workers_in_Mr._Broyles_Office_Using_Ed_Bus_Phonographs_EHS_29320054.jpg (49977 bytes) Workers using Edison Business Phonographs in Mr. Broyles's office, 1906. Edison National
Historic Site 
29320054
1906_Office_with_Montpelier_VT_Calendar_OM.jpg (266709 bytes) Office interior with a desk from the 1870s, 1906.  The office has two 1906 wall calendars.  One is an advertisement for the National Life Insurance Company, which was established in Montpelier, VT, in 1848; the company is still headquartered there. Early Office
Museum Archives
1906_Office_with_Book_Typewriter_North_Dakota_OM.jpg (336913 bytes)

County_Judge_Office_with_Oliver_typewriter_North_Dakota_OM.jpg (351258 bytes)

Office_with_Burroughs_North_Dakota_OM.jpg (357056 bytes)
These pictures show the interiors of three offices in North Dakota.  

The top photograph shows Ellen Livingstone using a book typewriter in an office in 1906, with her boss in front of her.  This photo is dated by the wall calendar.  Immediately below is an enlargement of Ms. Livingstone and the book typewriter from the top photograph to the left.  

1906_Office_with_Book_Typewriter_North_Dakota_detail_OM.jpg (237901 bytes)

The second and third photographs to the left apparently show Ellen Livingstone in other offices.  All three photographs were apparently sent to Ms. Livingstone in Medora, ND, in March 1911. 

The middle photograph shows the interior of the office of a Billings County, ND, judge.  Behind the woman is a vault.  Along the top of the vault the words "County Judge" are visible.  On the front of the vault is the word "Billings," which is the name of a county in ND.  The vault was made by the Victor Safe & Lock Co., and an 1887 patent date is visible on the inside of the right door.  There is an Oliver typewriter in front of the window.

The bottom photo shows the interior of another office in North Dakota.  In front of the man is a Burroughs Adding Machine, an item that became popular in offices around 1906, although it was on the market earlier.  Behind the woman is a typewriter, which appears to be an L.C. Smith & Bros. Model 1 or 2; those models were marketed between 1904 and 1911.  Attached to the top of the roll-top desk is a Planetary Pencil Pointer, a type of pencil sharpener that was marketed between 1896 and 1915.  

Early Office
Museum Archives
Architecture_or_Construction_Office_1.jpg (172082 bytes)

Architecture_or_Construction_Office_2.jpg (132752 bytes)
Two large offices at the same company.  These office may be at an architectural, construction, or engineering firm, because a third photograph (not shown here) of another office at the same company shows 15 men working on large sheets of paper at tilt-top desks of the types used by architects.  The top photo here includes a calendar advertising engines and boilers made by the Wm. Powell Co. A company with that name, located in Cincinnati, OH, has manufactured valves since 1846.  The bottom photo includes a calendar advertising Massachusetts Mutual. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. was founded in Massachusetts in 1851; in 1868 it opened its first West Coast office, and it was a national firm when this photo was taken.  The women's clothing and hair styles, and the presence of vertical file cabinets, are consistent with a date in the very early 1900s.  Early Office
Museum Archives
James_M._Brickhouse_politician_Little_Rock_Ark._c._1906_Smith_Premier_typewriter_electric_light_OM.JPG (29284 bytes) James M. Brickhouse, Little Rock, AR.  Brickhouse was a politician.  Photo shows a Smith Premier typewriter. Private collection
Private Office of Advertising Manager OM.JPG (39522 bytes) "Private Office of Advertising Manager." At the right, under a metal hood, is a Card Index Addressograph of a type that we have seen in 1907-10 advertisements. A wall calendar advertises the American Bonding Co. of Baltimore. Until 1901, the latter company was named the American Bonding & Trust Co. of Baltimore. Around 1902, the name was changed to American Bonding Co. of Baltimore. Early Office
Museum Archives
Office_Northwestern_Farmer_Menominee_MI_x.JPG (169144 bytes) Office of the Northwestern Farmer, a periodical publication, probably Menominee, MI.  Publication years for the Northwestern Farmer included 1907-08.  Menominee is on the Michigan-Wisconsin border. A Wisconsin Telephone Company directory and upstrike typewriters are visible in the photograph. Early Office
Museum Archives
1907 Washington 35.JPG (49091 bytes) Employee at desk in railroad terminal, King Street Station, Seattle, WA, by photographer James P. Lee, 1907. King Street Station was built during 1904-06. Dated by wall calendar. Photograph shows an upstrike typewriter and two candlestick telephones. Manuscripts, Special Collections, University Archives Div., University of Washington Libraries, James P. Lee Collection, No. 294
1907_Actuarial_Division_Metropolitan_Life_Insurance_Co_NYC.jpg (237267 bytes) Actuarial Division, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., New York, NY, postmarked 1907. Early Office 
Museum Archives
1907_Filing_Section_Metropolitan_Life_Insurance_Co_NYC.jpg (276002 bytes) Filing Section, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., New York, NY, postmarked 1907. Early Office
Museum Archives
Metropolitan_Life_Ins_Card_Cabinets.jpg (115133 bytes) Card Cabinets Containing Records of the Ordinary Insurance Department, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., New York, NY. Early Office
Museum Archives
Filing_Section_early_1900s_Metro_Life_Ins_Co_Museum_of_the_City_of_New_York.jpg (70879 bytes) Filing Section, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., New York, NY. Museum of the 
City of New York, 
Byron Collection
(93.1.1.6910)
Office_with_15_women_2_men_Maple_Studio_Marblehead_MA_OM.jpg (208011 bytes) Office with 15 women and 2 men.  Photograph by Maple Studio, Marblehead, MA. Early Office
Museum Archives
Man in Office with Safe.jpg (22115 bytes) Man at roll-top desk in office with safe and letter filing cabinet. A calendar advertises the National Carbon Company, which existed from 1886 to 1917. The content of the photo suggests a date during the early 1900s. Because a calendar shows that March began on Tuesday, the photo must date from 1904 or 1910. Early Office
Museum Archives
Office_in_Germany_OM.jpg (46393 bytes) Office, Germany. Early Office
Museum Archives
rkaycol Lone Shore v.JPG (36710 bytes) Four men in office with two typewriters and candlestick phone. The typewriter on the right is a Remington upstrike. On the wall is an advertisement for The Lake Shore Route, which was the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Co. This railway was formed in 1869 by the consolidation of existing railways and was controlled by Cornelius Vanderbilt and then William Vanderbilt. This railway was consolidated with the New York Central in 1914.

Ronald Beck

rkaykol Tire Store v.JPG (39060 bytes) Office in tire store. Typewriter, candlestick telephone, Star pen rack, pennant advertising Stronghold Tires. Ronald Beck
1907_Burroughs_Corp_Collection_Charles_Babbage_Institute_U_MN_cb000184.jpg (130978 bytes) Office with accounting machines, B-logo Business Systems Dept., 1907. Photo shows a Burroughs adding machine and a dictating machine. Charles Babbage
Institute
, Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Burroughs Corp. Collection, cb000184.
1907_Accounting_Dept_E__J_Burke_Ltd_Times_Square_NYC.jpg (133335 bytes) "The Accounting Department, E. & J. Burke, Ltd., Times Building, Times Square, New York," NY, postmarked 1907. E. & J. Burke was an Irish brewery and a New York distributor of alcoholic beverages.  All employees in the photo are men.  See the photo immediately below for the company's Correspondence Department, where all the employees are women. Early Office
Museum Archives

Correspondence_Department_E._J._Burke_Ltd._TIMES_BUILDING_New_York_distributor_of_alcoholic_beverages_OM.jpg (38661 bytes)

"The Correspondence Department, E. & J. Burke, Ltd., Times Building, Times Square, New York," NY.  See discussion of preceding photograph.  Early Office
Museum Archives
Hospital_Office_with_Switchboard.jpg (95489 bytes) Hospital office with Miss Brady at the telephone switchboard and Superintendent Taul at his desk.  Behind Mr. Taul is a sectional filing cabinet and an upstrike typewriter. There are two candlestick telephones. Early Office
Museum Archives
Office_with_Brunsviga_and_Remington_No._7.jpg (94274 bytes) Office with Brunsviga pinwheel calculating machine and Remington No. 7 upstrike typewriter. No location or date. Probably taken in continental Europe. Brunsviga pinwheel calculators were introduced in 1892 and sold for decades. The Remington No. 7 was introduced c. 1897. Early Office
Museum Archives
Six_Addressographs_and_a_Multigraph_NY_NY.jpg (97456 bytes) Office with five Addressograph addressing machines and a Multigraph for printing form letters, probably New York, NY.  Eight female workers are operating the machines and a man is standing in the background. Early Office
Museum Archives
1907_Office_Cycling_France_OM.jpg (225253 bytes)
Office, France, c. 1907.  One man is using an Oliver or Courier typewriter.  This photo was part of a set of French photos of a group of cyclists; see image to right for another photo in this set.  A poster says "Cycles & Chaines" (which translates to "Cycles & Chains," which is a term used in various sciences).  The spine of a book has the word "Paris" and the year "1907."  A hat has the words "Echo Sport" (which are the same in French and English).
Early Office
Museum Archives
Office_Red_Book_OM.jpg (230765 bytes) File:Red book 1913 07 b.jpg

 

Executive and stenographer or assistant at The Red Book magazine, Chicago, IL, 1904-1907. The frame on the desk contains a cover image from the magazine, and the wall to the left has several more covers with images of women. According to Wikipedia, "The magazine was first published in May 1903 as The Red Book Illustrated..... The name was changed to The Red Book Magazine shortly thereafter. Its first editor, from 1903 to 1906, was Trumbull White.... In its early years, the magazine published short fiction by well-known authors, including many women writers, along with photographs of popular actresses and other women of note. ... When White left..., he was replaced by Karl Edwin Harriman, who edited The Red Book Magazine...until 1912."  The man in the photo may be either White or Harriman.  The address side of this unused undivided back postcard states: "Post Card.  This side for the address only."  That format and wording date the postcard to 1901-1907.

July 1913 cover of The Red Book Magazine

Early Office
Museum Archives

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We are interested in purchasing interesting vintage photographs of office interiors of the types displayed above.


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