Three Depresion-Era Photographers in Utah
Dorothea Lange (b. New Jersey, 1895 – d. San Francisco, 1965), Russell Lee (b. Ottawa, Illinois 1903 – d. Austin, Texas 1986), and Arthur Rothstein (b. 1915, New York – d. 1985, New Rochelle, New York) are the three photographers who were hired by the Farm Security Administration to document rural Utah in the late 1930s. The portraits of agricultural workers and their families, and the land that they worked, provide a unique picture of Utah’s rural past.
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Box Elder County, Utah. Mormon women tacking a quilt to be used by a sheepherder
Russell Lee
Photographer
Gelatin silver print
Mrs. Christiansen of the Christiansen canning unit sealing cans. During 1939 she canned 2300 quarts which included 20 mutton, 2 deer, 2 beeves, 5 pigs. Fish was tried very successfully. In this cooperative agreement there were twenty-five users and outsid
Russell Lee
Photographer
Gelatin silver print
Mormon farmer who lives in Snowville, Utah and who farms in Oneida County, Idaho, bagging wheat
Russell Lee
Photographer
Gelatin silver print
Wife of Mormon farmer with canned goods. Snowville, Utah
Russell Lee
Photographer
Gelatin silver print
Farming land on outskirts of Logan. Cache County, Utah
Russell Lee
Photographer
Gelatin silver print
Grapes are one of the main diversified crops of this Mormon farmer, Cache County, Utah
Russell Lee
Photographer
Gelatin silver print
Turkeys are one of the main crops around Ivins, Washington County, Utah. See general caption
Russell Lee
Photographer
Gelatin silver print
Mormon farmer carrying cane to crusher, Ivins, Washington County, Utah
Russell Lee
Photographer
Gelatin silver print