ATTRACTIVE WOMAN IN DANBURY, CONNECTICUT ( PHOTOGRAPHED BY E. STARR SANFORD)

An attractive woman  poses for her portrait at the Sanford studio in Danbury, Connecticut. The woman is fashionably and conservatively dressed. The photographer is E. Starr Sanford (1862-1917) and his studio was located at 57 White Street, in Danbury.  Sanford partnered with Charles Henry Davis in 1892 to operate a very well respected photographic studio located at 462 Fifth Avenue in New York City, New York. Both men were amateur photographers in the 1880’s and they perfected their skills in club competitions. They pioneeered the colonization of Fifth Avenue by photographers. Sanford was from one of the founding families of Danbury, and Davis was a music critic for the New York Evening Post. They used their high society and theatrical community connections to build the success of their photographic studio. Sanford retired in 1901. In 1897 he decided to build a lavish summer home that he ultimately lived in for five years. His home was called Hearthstone Castle and now is included  in the National Register of Historic Places. Research reveals that some references contend that Sanford was one of the early inventors of movie cameras. Sanford died a tragic death. In 1914, while on a ship to visit his son in Texas, his vessel was struck by lightening and he received a severe shock. The arteries in his eyes were severely damaged, and he died three years later. To view other photographs by Sanford, click on Cabinet Card Gallery’s category “Photographer: Sanford”.

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4 CommentsLeave a comment

  1. ROD DAVIS's avatar

    Do you have a source for your 1862 dob of E. Starr Sanford? Carlton Sanford’s genealogy has it as 27 sep 1861.(p. 990) http://0-persi.heritagequestonline.com.midhudsonlibraries.org/hqoweb/library/do/books/results/image?urn=urn:proquest:US;glhbooks;Genealogy-glh31428686;1070;-1;&hitthreadid=1070

  2. Elizabeth Krafick's avatar

    I have a picture of a little girl with her dog taken by Sanford. Would love to know who she is and when it was taken.

    • bmarshphd's avatar

      I can identify with your curiosity. These vintage and antique photographs bring up many questions in most observer’s minds. Sometimes we are lucky and there is a name or other identifying information available on or on the reverse of the image. That’s when the detective work and the fun begins.


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