Shots making harbor history
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Luis Pena
If you could display only 40 out of more than 80,000 images, which 40
would they be?
Officials at the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum had to decide just
that, and they started by deciding on shots from their vast
collection of photographer William C. “Bill” Sawyer.
And that still meant choosing from some 47,080 photos.
Sawyer began visiting Southern California in 1897 and moved from
Vermont to Los Angeles in 1914, said Glen Zagoren, chief executive of
the museum.
The Sawyer photographs are unusual because they focus on
recreational yachting rather than merchant and Navy vessels, Zagoren
said. Photos of yachts, movie stars such as Errol Flynn, early harbor
views and races are just some of the scenes represented within his
collection. The photos on display are from 1915 through 1954.
The majority of the Sawyer collection is from Newport Beach.
Because of the voluminous number, the museum is seeking grants to pay
for transferring them into a digital catalog. Zagoren said it could
take as long as five years to catalog.
The photos are on display at the museum indefinitely. Some might
be alternated eventually.
The oldest image in the museum’s compilation is of the ship
Vaquero, taken in the harbor in 1870.
“No other photographer was able to so vividly and completely
capture the history of pleasure boating between Santa Barbara and San
Diego in parallel with its development,” said Marcus De Chevrieux,
curator of the museum.
The museum receives phone calls not only from researchers but also
from yachtsmen who have bought boats in its photographs. One man
purchased a boat that was in the 1936 Olympics and wanted photographs
of it so he could restore it, said Ann Wattson, registrar at the
museum.
Sawyer was an engineer with the city of Los Angeles while busy
taking photographs of Newport Beach. He would take the famous old Red
Car trolley into Balboa every weekend to take photos, Zagoren said.
Wattson remembers seeing Sawyer wearing his trademark, all-black
suit and high-tops, along with his large-format camera, on top of the
Balboa Pavilion taking shots.
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