1930s UNIDENTIFIED POLICE SERGEANT Original GEORGE BURKE Photo Negative

DATE: 1930s

SUBJECT: Unidentified Police Sergeant

PHOTOGRAPHER: George Burke

APPROXIMATE SIZE: 5"x7" AGFA Safety 8 Film Photographic Negative

COMMENTS / CONDITION: This is an original negative from the camera of noted baseball photographer George Burke which can still be used to produce prints of unparalleled quality. See scans for further details. Note that the ''positive'' images shown were produced by inverting a digital scan of the negative. Prints developed through a traditional darkroom "wet print" process should yield superior images to those shown here. Upon request, a high-resolution scan of the negative can be provided TO THE WINNER ONLY. This is a service provided for those who wish to enjoy their purchase digitally but do not have a scanner capable of scanning negatives, with no transfer of rights for the image implied.

George C. Burke was born in 1874 in Pennington Gap, VA and died in 1951 in Chicago, IL. A case of mistaken identity made by the Chicago Cubs resulted in George Burke becoming the official photographer for the Chicago Cubs. In 1929, Cubs manager Joe McCarthy and Gabby Hartnett sought out the ballclub's previous photographer. They could only remember his last name, Burke, so they looked him up in the phone book. A listing leapt out at them: studio photographer George C. Burke, whose office was near Wrigley Field. Thus began the baseball photography career of George Burke, who had no prior sports experience whatsoever, and thus ended the career of photographer Francis Burke - the Cubs' time-honored official cameraman and an unwitting victim of mistaken identity. To undertake his new "big league" endeavor, Burke hired the young (age 15) baseball-knowledgeable George Brace as his assistant, and the two soon became a Chicago institution. Ever-present at Wrigley Field and Comiskey Park, Burke and Brace shot not only for the Cubs, but also for the White Sox and football's Chicago Bears. They also endeavored to amass a complete portfolio of player portraits - a daunting task made possible by the fact that Chicago was the only city with both an American League and a National League franchise from 1929 all the way until Brace's retirement in 1993. As the official photographer for the Chicago Cubs, Burke quickly became renowned for his candid pre-game photos and thought-provoking portrait depictions, and his posed portraits and action photos were published in The Sporting News, Who's Who in the Major Leagues, and Baseball Digest as well as other publications, and provided the necessary photos for numerous 1930's and later baseball card and premium issues.

SKU: GBNHY0033



Item: GBNHY0033

Retail Price: $19.95
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1930s UNIDENTIFIED POLICE SERGEANT Original GEORGE BURKE Photo Negative1930s UNIDENTIFIED POLICE SERGEANT Original GEORGE BURKE Photo Negative1930s UNIDENTIFIED POLICE SERGEANT Original GEORGE BURKE Photo Negative
1930s UNIDENTIFIED POLICE SERGEANT Original GEORGE BURKE Photo Negative
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