
Ancestorville
PO Box 125 Ghent, NY 12075
Located in the Hudson Valley of NY
Phone 518 632 1075.
email: debra@ancestorville.com
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Ancestorville.
A new genealogy site and the
only one like it on the web. More added daily!
Currently 10,386 surnames and over 4,100 19th c. lost family photos, antiques, calling
cards, quilt blocks, school rewards, family bibles, letters and
related family antiques, antique paper & ephemera all for sale,
as well as family photo digital downloads to purchase...and all
searchable.
Search for your family
by surname, county, photographer, state and category.
Come
talk with us at the Ancestorville
Town Meeting, our new forum message boards
on the topic of lost family antique items, early
photographs, genealogy surnames and family history
topics.
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Daguerreotype
Photographs c. 1839-1860's
The first photographs,
daguerreotypes caused a world sensation. "Dag" images
were made on a highly polished plate,
and are the only antique photographs
to have a silver mirror finish. They
require a case, and are most likely
found housed in them. The dag to
the right, has a gold brass matte
and small sheet of protective glass
over the image, as most do. They
often are not identified, unless
by paper slipped between the daguerreotype
and case, or sewn into the velvet
pad. The Ann Ware family "dag" to
right has a paper enclosed with identification,
an unusual occurence--->
Search
Ancestorville for your family surname
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Ann
Ware identified Daguerreotype, Gt. Gt. Grandmother
to Winifred on Baboo's (Jenkins) side. Search for
this lost Ware family photo at Ancestorville.
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Tintype
Photo of Martin Wise, c. 1850-60's. Found in Massachusetts
MA. Search for
this lost Wise family photo at Ancestorville.
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Ambrotype
Photographs c. Late 1850-1860's
Ambrotypes were produced on glass plates, with a black varnished or painted
backing. Because of the glass format, they required cases, often decorative,
as seen above. It is unusual to find them identified. The Judd family
ambro shown to right has a slip of paper with Judd family identification
sewn onto the early red velvet case pad--->
Read an Ancestorville article on Ambrotype Photos
Search
Ancestorville for your family surname
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Ambrotype photo of Maria Judd's eldest Sons c. 1850-60's. Found in together
in NYS with a photo of their Mother. Search for
this lost Judd family photo at Ancestorville.
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CDV
Carte De Visite Photographs c. 1850's-1890's
A CDV is a small albumen
print which is mounted to a card
measuring about 2 1/2 to 4 inches.
The earlier CDV's generally have
square corners, and become more elaborate
and on heavier stock with rounded
corners and fancier backmarks as
time proceeded. Introduced by the
French, they became standard Victorian
fare as calling cards and extremely
popular. They became highly collectible,
even in their time. Photographer's
names and advertising are often printed
on the back, called a "backmark".
The beautiful CDV to right is of
a young girl, Evelyn Benedict, and
is wonderfully hand colored or hand
tinted.--->
Read
an Ancestorville article on history of CDV
Photos
Search
Ancestorville for your family surname
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CDV
hand tinted Carte de Visite photograph of Evelyn
Benedict c. 1860-70. Taken in Brooklyn, New York
NY. Found in Onondaga County, NYS. Search for
this lost Benedict family photo at Ancestorville.
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Cabinet
Card Photographs late
1860's-1900
Cabinet cards are a larger paper
albumen (egg white) print measuring
about 4 1/2 x 5 1/2 inches, glued to
a cardboard mount. Photographer backmarks
can be beautiful and ornate, with high
Victorian advertising. Many we see
are not identified, and many have been
removed from old family albums, which
were also a Victorian rage. They
were most popular after the Civil war
era, in the 1880-90's.--->
Read
an Ancestorville article on history of Cabinet Card
Photos
Search
Ancestorville for your family surname
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c.
1870-80's Cabinet Photo of Jane Crittenden. England
UK. Found in Hampshire County, MA. Search for
this lost Crittenden family photo at Ancestorville.
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Stereoview
Photographs 1850's-1910
A Stereoview is a pair of identical
albumen photos mounted on a card
for 3D viewing in a hand held stereoscope,
also a Victorian era rage. We look
for stereoviews of identified gravesites,
cemetery markers, homesteads, architecture,
storefronts, advertising signs and
signage and identified people. It
is uncommon to find them family identified.--->
Read
an article on Stereoview Photos
Search
Ancestorville for your family surname

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1870's
Stereoview of John Farnsworth Home and Residence,
taken in Saxtons River in Windham County, Vermont
VT. Found in New England. Search for
this lost Farnsworth family item at Ancestorville.
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Other
photographs 1880's-1940's
We have many dry plate, gelatin, or dry mount photographs and snapshots
on the ancestorville site, of different and varying sizes, papers, printing
processes and tones. They were in use from the late 1800's and into the
20th century. This wonderful photo of baby Kenneth Crawford sitting in
a porcelain wash basin (from an old pitcher and bowl set) is one of our
favorites!--->
Search
Ancestorville for your family surname

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c.
1880-90's Photo of Kenneth Crawford. Found in Franklin
County, MA. Search for
this lost Crawford family photo at Ancestorville.
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Paper
Film & Snapshots 1890's-1950's
In 1880 George Eastman, age 24, set up the Eastman Dry Plate Company
in Rochester, NY. In 1888, the first Kodak camera, containing a 20-foot
roll of paper, enough for 100 2.5-inch diameter circular pictures was
introduced. In 1889, an Improved Kodak camera with an actual roll of
film inside was introduced. This was the first time the public could
take their own photographs. As they say, and the rest is history...!--->
Read
an Ancestorville article on Snapshot
Photos
Search
Ancestorville for your family surname
Click
to see Page 2 of ephemera for sale at Ancestorville--->
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c.
1890-1900's, 4 Generations of the Brown Lane, Robinson
family. Found with others in NYS. Search for
this lost Brown family photo at Ancestorville.
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