Featured Red River Lumber Co. Print 1940's. Rare or not?

Discussion in 'Art' started by 916Bulldogs123, Dec 10, 2017.

  1. 916Bulldogs123

    916Bulldogs123 Well-Known Member

    Print measures framed 21" x 13"
    I find a lot about the company but can't seem to find any other prints.You would think if they own their own town and had a printing company that there would be other prints.
    There is a piece of paper attached to the back.
    " taken at Westwood 1941, Red River Lumber Co. Property of Frank Reynolds 1953"
    Mikey

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  2. buyingtime777

    buyingtime777 Well-Known Member

  3. 916Bulldogs123

    916Bulldogs123 Well-Known Member

    I was just reading about the history of Red River Lumber Co. and came across this book. The cover is of this print. it's reversed and in black and white but it is the same

    Red River book.jpg
     
  4. buyingtime777

    buyingtime777 Well-Known Member

    I am sure there are more but it may well qualify as "hard to find" for sure. It strikes me as one of those items that may do very well in the area the company was in.

    I have a connection to a town called Telluride in Colorado and old things from there sell very well and when I list I make sure I get the words "Antique Telluride" in the item title because people from there are always hunting.
     
  5. 916Bulldogs123

    916Bulldogs123 Well-Known Member

    That sounds like a plan. I'm about 150 miles from Westwood, Where this was taken.
     
  6. 916Bulldogs123

    916Bulldogs123 Well-Known Member

    I sent the author an email last night not expecting an answer back but it was worth a try.
    I received an email from him this morning.
    here is what he told me

    Mike,
    That actual photograph was taken in 1939 by Jervie Eastman, a Susanville photographer for the Red River Lumber Company. The litho print that you have was used for the Company’s 1940 calendar. It was taken in Moonlight Valley, Plumas County. It was also made into a postcard. Yours is a framed print that the company gave to management.

    Tim
     
    Bakersgma and KingofThings like this.
  7. buyingtime777

    buyingtime777 Well-Known Member

    Very nice!!!! I think descendants of the company employees and such may be very interested in that if selling is your intention. Definitely a hard to find litho I believe. Nice find and a striking piece to boot!
     
    KingofThings likes this.
  8. 916Bulldogs123

    916Bulldogs123 Well-Known Member

    Information on J H Eastman. Apparently he did well with post cards also. there is 60 or so on Ebay right now.

    While he was actually born in Michigan in 1880, his family moved to the wilds of northern California in 1886. By 1898, at the age of eighteen, Eastman was a practicing ‘view photographer’ in Sisson, which of course is now known as Mt. Shasta. By 1907, he was a partner in the Shasta View Company, and lost all of his burgeoning collection of photo plates in a fire in 1912.

    In 1921, Jervie Henry Eastman moved to Susanville and established Eastman & Company as a commercial photography and post card studio. In 1936 he hired Mirl Simmons, a young photographer from Hillsborough, West Virginia, to help with the postcard photography. In 1947, Eastman and Simmons became partners. The business had expanded to provide photographic supplies to southeastern Oregon and studios in Westwood, Weed, and Susanville.

    By the end of his long career, Jervie Eastman and his company amassed over 13,000 images – contributing a prolific archive of our area in the 20th century. While his images of the construction of Shasta Dam and the highways that began to proliferate as access to rural areas began to be realized are important contributions to the history of the State of Jefferson, it’s his images of the downtown areas of our communities that really resonate. Towns like Klamath Falls, Weed and Alturas are frozen in time inside these arresting images, often easily attributed to a year by the automobliles in the photos. Eastman also understood the value of ‘kitsch’, evidenced by his images of playful bears, squirrels and other wildlife that probably sold very well in their time.

    Eastman retired from photography in 1959 and sold his share of the business to his partner since 1947, Mirl Simmons. Jervie Eastman died in Susanville in 1969.

    Mirl Simmons ran the Eastman Studios until 1980, when he retired and sold the business to John and Shirley Castle. Mirl Simmons died in 1987, in Jamestown, California.

    The Eastman’s Originals Collection (the historical postcards and negatives) was sold to Anne Fisher in 1982, presumably by Simmons. Fisher managed the collection until her retirement in 1994, when she donated the collection to the University of California, Davis.
     
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