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Guide to the Photographs of the Brackenridge Family, 1898-1932

Repository
Heinz History Center
Title
Photographs of the Brackenridge Family
Collection Number
MSP#160
Extent
.25 cubic feet (1 box)
Date
1898-1932
Abstract
The Brackenridge's were a prominent and influential family in Western Pennsylvania. Caroline Marie Brackenridge, the wife of Henry Marie Brackenridge, had extensive land holdings in Western Pennsylvania that helped to form the towns of Brackenridge, Tarentum and Natrona. Henry Marie Brackenridge was a prominent political figure who traveled extensively in New Orleans, Florida and South America. The Brackenridge Family photographs contain the family photographs of the Brackenridge family, townspeople of Brackenridge and Tarentum and homes of family members.
Language
The material in this collection is in English.
Author
This guide to the collection was originally prepared by Donald L. Haggerty in July 1988. Papers rearranged and inventory rewritten by Stephanie Riccardi on January 12, 1995.Revisions occurred to the finding aid as a part of the encoding process in Winter, 2001-2002.
Sponsor
This finding aid has been encoded as a part of the Historic Pittsburgh project a joint effort of the University of Pittsburgh and the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania. Funding for this portion of the project has been donated by the Hillman Foundation.
Publisher
Heinz History Center
Address
1212 Smallman St.
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15222
library@heinzhistorycenter.org
URL: https://www.heinzhistorycenter.org

Biographical Sketch of the Brackenridge Family

The Brackenridges were a prominent and influenical family in Western Pennsylvania. Caroline Marie Brackenridge, the wife of Henry Marie Brackenridge, had extensive land holdings in Western Pennsylvania which helped to form the towns of Brackenridge, Tarentum and Natrona. Henry Marie Brackenridge was a prominent political figure who travelled extensively in New Orleans, Florida and South America. He was elected to the United States Congress and served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Hugh Henry Brackenridge was an incorporator of the Pittsburgh Academy, the predecessor to the University of Pittsburgh. Henry Morgan Brackenridge was involved extensivley as an officer and director of prominent Pittsburgh area companies and Benjamin Morgan Brackenridge produced family portraits as an amateur, but influencial photographer.

The Brackenridge Family was established in America by John Breckenridge, a farmer, who emigrated from Scotland in 1753 and settled with his family in York County, Pennsylvania. John Breckenridge changed the spelling of his last name from Breckenridge to Brackenridge when his family arrived in America. Historians believe the "a" referred to a sentimental attachment to the fields and ridges of bracken, a fern-like plant native to the section of Scotland the family migrated from. John's son, Hugh Henry Brackenridge, was born in 1748 near Campbeltown, Scotland. As a child, Hugh studied the classics with a neighboring clergyman in York County. At the age of fifteen he became the teacher at the Maryland school in order to earn money to continue his education. From 1768-1771 he attended Princeton University. Upon graduation he became the head of a Maryland academy while he studied divinity. He completed his master's degree at Princeton in 1774, and served as the chaplain at Valley Forge upon the request of General George Washington during the Revolutionary War. Soon after the war he gave up the ministry and studied law with Samuel Chase at Annapolis and was admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar.

Hugh moved his family to Pittsburgh in 1781. Here he helped to establish the first two newspapers in the city, the Pittsburgh Gazette in 1786 and later the Tree of Liberty. Brackenridge was an avid writer and produced a number of literary materials during his lifetime. These included: The Battle of Bunker's Hill (1776); The Death of General Montgomery (1777); Eulogium of the Brave Who Fell in the Contest with Great Britain (1778); Incidents of the Insurrection in the Western Parts of Pennsylvania (1795); Modern Chivalry (1796); Gazette Publications Collected (1806); and Law Miscellanies (1814). He funded and established first bookstore in Pittsburgh in 1789 and was an incorporator of the Pittsburgh Academy in 1787. The academy was the predecessor to the University of Pittsburgh. From 1786-1787 he was a member of the state legislature and was a supporter of the federal constitution. Brackenridge was married twice. The name of his first wife is unknown. The had one child, Hugh Marie. She died soon after his birth. In 1790 Hugh Henry married Sabina Wolfe. Their children were Alexander, Cornelia and William. Brackenridge played a key role in the Whiskey Rebellion of 1794, but was later exonerated of any wrong doing by the federal government. In 1799 he was appointed a judge on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. In 1801 he moved from Pittsburgh to Carlisle, Pennsylvania, where he continued to study and write law until his death on June 25, 1816.

Henry Marie Brackenridge was born at Pittsburgh on May 11, 1786. Henry's father, a widower, began his son's education at the age of two. At the age of seven he was sent to an academy at St. Genevieve in upper Louisiana where he studied French. He returned to Pittsburgh in 1796 to resume his studies under his father and attended the Pittsburgh Academy. He studied law in Pittsburgh and was admitted to the bar in 1806. He tried unsuccessfully to establish a law practice in Carlisle before relocating to Somerset, Pennsylvania. He practiced law here until 1810 when he relocated to Louisiana. In 1811 Brackenridge settled in New Orleans and was appointed deputy attorney general of the territory. In 1817 he was appointed secretary of the commission to study political situations in South America. In 1821 he returned to the U.S. to Florida where he secured a position first as translator, then as judge of the western district of Florida. In 1827 he married Caroline Marie and they had two children, Cornelia who died in infancy and Benjamin Morgan. In 1832 he was removed as judge of the western district of Florida by Andrew Jackson. He returned to Pittsburgh to develop his wife's extensive land holdings. Here he founded the town of Tarentum. Later the towns of Brackenridge and Natrona were developed on these lands. From 1840-1841 he was elected to the United States Congress and in 1844 he was elected as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. At the end of his term he returned to his home and continued his public and private pursuits until his death in 1871.

Benjamin Morgan Brackenridge was born in Brackenridge, Pennsylvania on November 5, 1828. Benjamin was a photographer, scientist, artist and a chemist. He was noted as an authority in the field of photography, then in its infancy, and photographed family members, family homes, and townspeople. Benjamin married Phillipine Stieren, daughter of Edward Stieren who was the first chemist for the Pennsylvania Salt Company located in Bellevue, Pennsylvania. They had three children: Cornelia, Amelia, who died in infancy, and Henry Morgan. Benjamin was in frail health and died at the age of thirty-three on June 25, 1862.

Henry Morgan Brackenridge was born July 17, 1856. He was educated in the public schools, at the Western University of Pennsylvania, and at the Royal Polytechnic Institute of Dresden, Germany. He was involved in the development of the Brackenridge estate and the officer and director of the following companies: The Brackenridge-McKelvey Land Company; Bank of Pittsburgh; Tarentum Glass Company; Allegheny Iron and Steel Company; James H. Baker Manufacturing Company; First National Bank of Tarentum; National Bank of Tarentum; and the United Coal Company. He married Madge Richards on October 7, 1885 at Fredericksburg, Virginia and had two daughters, Helen and Cornelia. Henry Morgan died on July 27, 1927.

Scope and Content Notes

The Brackenridge Family Photographs are housed in one archival box, and are arranged by family member. The Brackenridge Family photographs contain the family photographs of the Brackenridge family, townspeople of Brackenridge and Tarentum and homes of family members. Benjamin Morgan Brackenridge, an amateur photographer, took the thirty-six photographs included in the collection. Except for the photographs of homes, all photographs were taken in a portrait style. Photographs are available for Alexander, Benjamin, Henry Marie, Hugh Henry, Phillipine Stieren Brackenridge, Cornelia Brackenridge McKelvy, and Carl W.E.E. Stieren. All of these photographs were identified to be in the time frame of c1898-c1932. A glass plate negative of Hugh Henry Brackenridge is also found in the form of a portrait.

Benjamin Morgan Brackenridge also took photographs of the townspeople of Brackenridge and Tarentum. None of these photographs include an identity of whom the individuals are, but they show a variety of different ages and sexes of the residents of these areas. The photographs of homes include not only views of the homes themselves, but also include the working of men in their yards attending to their gardens. Unfortunately, not all of the photographs here are identified, but it is assumed that they are from the towns of Tarentum or Brackenridge as well.

Conditions Governing Access

This collection is open for research.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

These materials came in four accessions and were combined into one body of papers in 1982.

Acc# 1932x Gift of Julian Boyd, May 13, 1932, (Papers).

Acc# 1933x Gift of Roy Nichols, 1933, (Papers).

Acc# 1941x Gift of Mrs. Elvert M. Davis, 1941, (Papers).

Acc# 1975.107 Gift of Cornelia Painter, July 3, 1975, (Papers).

Preferred Citation

Photographs of the Brackenridge Family, 1898-1932, MSP# 160, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania.

Processing Information

This collection was processed by Donald L. Haggerty in 1988. Papers rearranged and inventory rewritten by Stephanie Riccardi on January 12, 1995.

Revision and rearrangement for the encoded version of the finding aid provided by Doug MacGregor on February 12, 2002.

Conditions Governing Use

Property rights reside with the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania. Literary rights are retained by the creators of the records and their heirs. For permissions to reproduce or publish, please contact the curator of the Archives.

Subjects

    Personal Names

    • Brackenridge Family
    • Brackenridge, H. H.(Hugh Henry)(1748-1816)
    • Brackenridge, Alexander
    • Brackenridge, Benjamin
    • Brackenridge, H. M.(Henry Marie)(1786-1871)
    • Brackenridge, Phillipine Stieren
    • McKelvy, Cornelia Brackenridge
    • Stieren, Carl W.E.E.

    Geographic Names

    • Tarentum (Pa.) -- photographs
    • Brackenridge (Pa.) -- photographs

Container List

Brackenridge Family, 1898-1932
Containers
Box 1, Folder 1
Brackenridge, Hugh Henry
Containers
Box 1, Folder 2
Homes, c1898
Containers
Box 1, Folder 3
People-unidentified
Containers
Box 1, Folder 4