1946
65 Years ago today: Rodeo Makes Its Annual Visit to Bellevue…
Recent Auctions: Summer, Upper West Side, 1946… Sold for $20,000
WEEGEE (1899-1968)
Summer, the Lower East Side, c. 1937
or
WEEGEE (1899-1968)
Summer, Upper West Side, 1946
Gelatin silver print
West 47th Street and ‘Weegee the Famous’ credit stamps (on verso)
10 3/8 x 13 1/8in
Sold for: $20,000
(Estimate $5,000 – $7,000)
Sale 2407 Lot 151
Christies
Selections from the Baio Collection of Photography
April 15, 2010
Summer? Yes. Lower East Side? Probably Not. 1937? No…

PM Weekly, November 10, 1946, Vol. 7, No. 123, pp. m10-11

PM Weekly, November 10, 1946, Vol. 7, No. 123, pp. m10-11
“Weegee’s People at Manhattan Avenue and 107th St.”

Weegee The Famous, 1977, “Summer, the Lower East Side, 1937,” pp. 42-43

Weegee’s New York, “Summer on the Lower East Side…, 1937,” p. 178

Weegee’s World, “Summer, the Lower East Side, ca. 1937,” pp. 48-49
Where and when was this photo made?
Wee are still tracing its publication history (it’s funny how some of Weegee’s most famous and iconic photos have ambiguous origins, like Simply Add Boiling Water)…. perhaps the first publication was in PM, November 10, 1946, (in a publication – Weegee’s People – announcement) and perhaps the second publication was as the untitled front endpaper for Weegee’s People, November 1946.
In Louis Stettner’s 1977 Weegee the Famous (pp. 42-43) the title is “Summer, the Lower East Side, 1937. (Of course many of the titles and dates are incorrect in this otherwise great book.)
In the 1982 Weegee’s New York, “Summer on the Lower East Side…” p. 178, is juxtaposed with “… a cop stops the fun, 1937” p. 179.
(The photo on page 179 was made on the Lower East Side, and probably has nothing to do with the photo on page 178, “Summer on the Lower East Side…”) (Of course many of the titles and dates are incorrect in this otherwise great book.)
In Weegee’s World, the photo appears as “Summer, the Lower East Side, ca. 1937” following a few images of people sleeping on fire escapes… and it is the oldest photo in the Lower East Side chapter (or the one with the earliest date), with two photos dated ca. 1939, and one or two from 1940.
Most of the photos in Weegee’s People were made in 1945 and 1946.
Some were published in PM, some might have been published elsewhere, and some were previously unpublished.
Wee don’t think there are any photos in Weegee’s People that were made in the 1930s.
Perhaps the photo was made in the summer of 1946, or the summer of 1945.
And perhaps it was not made in the Lower East Side, (the architecture in the background doesn’t look like the Lower East Side) perhaps it was made around Manhattan Ave. and 107th St.
In a 1946 caption the photo has the title: “Weegee’s People at Manhattan Avenue and 107th St.“
(I don’t think it was made exactly here, Manhattan Ave, and 107th St., but there’s an amusing coincidence, that there’s a guy on a fire hydrant…)
These pictures are from Weegee’s People (Duell, Sloan, Pearce, $4), which will be published on November 11. Weegee says of the new book. “Unlike my previous book, Naked City, this is New York in a happier and gayer mood. I went looking for beauty and found it. My formula – dealing as I do with human beings, and I find them wonderful – leave them alone and let them be themselves – holding hands with love-light in their eyes-sleeping-or merely walking down the street. The trick is to be where people are.” Weegee’s next venture will be movie-making”
PM Weekly, November 10, 1946, Vol. 7, No. 123, pp. m10-11
And so it was…
TO BE CONTINUED!
She’ll Be Queen of the Photographer’s Party…

Unidentified Photographer, January 1946
Miss Patricia Van Iver, model from Upper Darby, Pa., poses appropriately after being chosen yesterday as Queen of 1946 by the Press Photographer’s Assn., Inc. The 20-year-old beauty will preside at the cameraman’s 17th annual entertainment and dance at the Waldorf Feb. 1
(According to the Internet, Patricia Van Iver, 1946 Queen of the Photographer’s Party was also known as Dolores Donlon, a.k.a. Miss August 1957, a Playboy Playmate of the month…)
A hot time was had by all…
Don Freeman’s Newsstand takes in Eddie Condon’s New Bandstand
In the groove on opening night – 47 West 3d St. Cast of characters seen below – Brad Gowan on Valve Trombone; Wild Bill Davison, Trumpet; Bud Freeman, Sax; Joe Marsala, Clarinet; Eddie Condon, Guitar; Dave Tough, Drums; And in front of the stand, flashing away with cameras – Gjon Mili, Lisette, and Weegee on the Speed Graphic – a hot time was had by all-
In foreground – Maggie Gowan (Brad’s wife) sitting with friend Eddie Edwards – known as Daddy Edwards of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band, and creator of “Tiger Rag” and other classics.
PM Daily, January 6, 1946
Great Don Freeman website is here…
(Love the amazingly perceptive thought: “Weegee on the Speed Graphic.”)
This is the first of a series that will explore Weegee and music…













