Thomas
Annan was born in 1829 in Dairsie, Fife. In 1845 at the age of 16 he was
approved by the local Fife Herald newspaper, to be an apprentice as a lithographic
writer and engraver. During this period he distinguished himself successfully
by finishing his education in the fourth year, instead of the seven year
planned apprenticeship.
From
there Annan moved to Glasgow where he got to work in a lithographic workshop
under the ownership of Joseph Swan. In between the 1850s and 1860s photography
took a step in the commercial value and as a result the lithographic trade
declined, in conjunction to this Annan took up a partnership business in 1855
as a ‘collodion calotypist’. Two years later he managed to have his own
company, and in 1860 he bought a large format camera to be able in taking
photographs, which emitted his crave for light, feelings of emotions and
majesty in landscape. He was well renowned as a keen expert in reproducing
works of art; this enabled him to receive a high profile work task by the
Glasgow Art Union in 1862.
As
in 1866 an act was accepted by the government, to put down all the deteriorated
slums in the City Parish, however when the actual demolishing was about to take
place in 1868, a need to keep a documentation via photography of the
characteristics in the old town, the chosen photographer for this task was
Thomas Annan.
Thomas Annan was quoted saying:
"I have seen human degradation in some of
its worst phases, both in England and abroad, but I can advisedly say, that I
did not believe, until I visited the wynds of Glasgow, that so large an amount
of filth, crime, misery, and disease existed in one spot in any civilised
country. The wynds consist of long lanes, so narrow that a cart could with
difficulty pass along them; out of these open the 'closes', which are courts
about fifteen or twenty feet square, round which the houses, mostly three or
four storeys high, are built; the centre of the court is the dunghill, which
probably is the most lucrative part of the estate to the laird in most
instances, and which it would consequently be esteemed an invasion of the
rights of property to remove. In the lower lodging houses, ten, twelve, or
sometimes twenty persons, of both sexes and all ages, sleep promiscuously on
the floor in different degrees of nakedness. These places are generally, as
regards dirt, damp, and decay, such as no person of common humanity would
stable his horse in." (University of Glasgow, 2006. Thomas Annan.)
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Plate 7: Close, No. 75 High Street. Washing was hung to dry in back courts which also contained gutters for sewage |
University
of Glasgow, 2006.Thomas Annan. [online]
Available
at: <http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/exhibns/month/Mar2006.html>
[Accessed 25 December 2013].
[Accessed 25 December 2013].