Louis L. McAllister Photographs
Louis L. McAllister photographed people and places near Burlington, Vermont for 60 years. He was born in Columbus, Nebraska on October 16, 1876, the son of Julius S. McAllister (born 1841 in Lincoln, VT) and Rosette Gould (born in Vermont in 1851). Julius McAllister worked as a photographer and dentist in Washington D.C., Bristol, Vermont and Columbus, Nebraska. Around 1895, Julius, his third wife Amy, and their children left Nebraska for the Union Soldiers’ Colony in Fitzgerald, Georgia. By 1900, Julius and Amy were divorced, and Amy and her stepson Louis were working as photographers in Thomasville, Georgia.
In 1907 Louis McAllister married Cora Shepard (born about 1872 in Vermont) in Holland, Michigan. By 1910, they were living in Queen City Park in South Burlington, Vermont, where Louis established a photography studio. The McAllisters moved to Burlington, and by 1919 they lived at 47 N. Winooski Avenue. They continued to occupy a summer cottage at Queen City Park, and were active in the Queen City Park Association, which held spiritualist camp meetings annually. McAllister conducted his photography business from home until his death in 1963.
McAllister’s “trademark” was his panorama camera which made him familiar to all sorts of groups ranging from graduating classes to state police to summer camp groups. In addition he did print 8 x 10 photos, many of which document building construction and Burlington Street Department projects, as well as group and individual portraits.
The L.L. McAllister Collection includes portraits, construction projects, buildings, businesses and events in the Burlington area covering the period ca. 1920-1960. The collection also includes photos of street, bridge, airport and sewer construction and repair, as well as group portraits of clubs, schools, etc.
Revised April, 2010
Showing 181 - 190 of 9221 Records
Ticonderoga - Move to Shelburne Museum
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- Date Created: 1955-01-31
- Description: January 31, 1955. The steamship Ticonderoga begins its 9,250 foot overland journey to the Shelburne Museum. The ship has been welded to its wheeled cradle. The railroad tracks have been laid in front of her and she will make a 150 foot advance on this first day. Photo 115.
- Parent Collections: Louis L. McAllister Photographs
Ticonderoga - Move to Shelburne Museum
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- Date Created: 1955-02-05
- Description: February 5, 1955. The steamship Ticonderoga inches her way along double railroad tracks. Metal rods and wooden planks span the center between the two tracks. Men of W. B. Hill Company of Tilton, New Hampshire attend the rails helping to ensure that the boat safely navigates its 2 mile trip overland to the Shelburne Museum.
- Parent Collections: Louis L. McAllister Photographs
Town & Country Motel
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- Description: Town & Country Motel located on Shelburne Road in Burlington, Vermont. 1950s?
- Parent Collections: Louis L. McAllister Photographs
Town & Country Motel
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- Description: Town & Country Motel located on Shelburne Road in Burlington, Vermont. 1950s?
- Parent Collections: Louis L. McAllister Photographs
Trinity College, Burlington
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- Description: Exterior view of Mount St. Mary's, a private Catholic girls' school, located at 100 Mansfield Ave in Burlington, Vermont. Undated. Earlier photo than mcalA14F01i07 taken in 1950s. No trees here. This new wing served as the first "home" of Trinity College, before it moved to a new building in 1939 (Mann Hall).
- Parent Collections: Louis L. McAllister Photographs
UVM Botany Dept.
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- Description: Group of young men, including an African-American, possibly UVM students and members of a fraternity, dressed in comic "hayseed" attire and carrying scythes and pitchforks. Housing in background suggests campus setting. Horse-drawn farm implement. Warm and sunny day; occasion unknown.
- Parent Collections: Louis L. McAllister Photographs
UVM Buildings
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- Description: Created in 1921 and restored in 2000, "this bronze statue of UVM's founder, Ira Allen, was executed by sculptor Sherry Fry, a member of the National Academy of Design... James B. Wilbur, a wealthy businessman from Manchester, Vermont, who wrote the 1928 biography of Ira Allen, gave the statue to the University. The statue displaced the Lafayette statue which was relocated to the north side of the University Green, thus severing the logical connection between the original placement of the statue of Lafayette and Old Mill." (Source: Prof. William Lipke, UVM Dept. of Art. "Ira Allen, 1921" Art & Architecture at UVM. http://www.uvm.edu/~wlipke/artuvm/allen.php)
- Parent Collections: Louis L. McAllister Photographs
UVM Ira Allen Chapel
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- Description: Ira Allen Chapel, as seen from the UVM green.
- Parent Collections: Louis L. McAllister Photographs
UVM Kake Walk
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- Description: UVM Kake Walk couple. If these are the same as those identified in the UVM yearbook (Ariel 1929) as "The Winning Couple," they are: Nelson B. Gray, class '30 & Charles N. DeRose, class '30, members of Phi Delta Theta. Photo #4.
- Parent Collections: Louis L. McAllister Photographs
Vermont Structural Steel
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- Description: Interior view of a large building of Vermont Structural Steel filled with machinery, equipment and supplies. Dated1951.
- Parent Collections: Louis L. McAllister Photographs