Subtitle: As Seen by Photographer Harry
C. Dorer Author: John T. Cunningham Subject: Regional / Natural History Cloth ISBN 0-8135-4039-9 Pages: 256 pages. 322 b&w
photographs Publication Date: May 2007
LISTEN TO AN
INTERVIEW with John T. Cunningham
Harry C. Dorer roamed New Jersey for four decades from 1920
until 1954 with his boxy Speed Graphic camera, capturing for a weekly
newspaper the images of what is now a vanished landscape. From the
state's cities and villages to its rural areas to the then-mysterious
Pine Barrens and the fishing fleets at the Jersey Shore, Dorer amassed
hundreds of images that revealed the region's rapidly changing
countryside, customs, and social dynamics.
Distinguished for his journalistic eye, Dorer did not search
out "pretty" subjects. His photographs of Pine Barrens residents are
both gritty and charming-honest depictions of quiet people living in
poverty. His scenes of rural northern New Jersey are equally blunt,
bearing stark witness to the rudimentary living conditions in the days
before good roads and electricity came to counties such as Sussex and
Warren. His photographs of the state's Ku Klux Klan presence and the
tragedy of the passenger ship Morro Castle are raw history.
Dorer, however, did have an eye for reader appeal and a sense
of beauty as well. His cloud effects are stunning, turning ordinary
scenes into landscape portraits. Likewise, his photographs of children,
ranging from poor kids in Newark taking an illegal dip in the Wars
of America fountain to the children of the Pine Barrens lined up
by the family fliver, are compassionate and delightful.
Bringing together more than 300 of Dorer's photographs, this
stunning collection is no ordinary look at New Jersey's past. Dorer's
always incisive eye provides a visual record of the state's history
that is unsettling, shocking, enchanting, and endearing. Above all, his
photographs are a vivid reminder of how much the state has changed.
About the Author:
John T. Cunningham, hailed by the New Jersey
Historical Commission as the state's "most popular historian," is the
author of numerous books and magazine articles and has produced more
than twenty documentary films. He was been awarded nine honorary
degrees by New Jersey colleges and institutions and has earned four
Awards of Merit from the American Association for State and Local
History.