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Photo Gallery: Hamburgers, A Pictorial History

Yesterday, we used a photograph of a farmer eating a burger at a cornhusking contest in Marshall County, Iowa, to illustrate an entry here. It's from the Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Online Catalog. Below, we offer a look at other noteworthy burger photos we dug up from the available online collection.

Most of the photos here were taken by Russell Lee (right; 1903–1986), who was invited to join the federally funded Farm Security Administration as part of a team of photographers charged with documenting the plight of the rural poor during the Depression. (Esther Bubley, Jack Delano, and Arthur Rothstein, whose photos are also represented below, were members of the project as well.)

These photos are truly a fascinating scrapbook of hamburger—and American—history, and they're available for reproduction online at the Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Reading Room (search the catalog for "hamburger"). Dig in!


Making hamburgers in concession stand, National Rice Festival, Crowley, Louisiana; October 1938; Russell Lee


Interior of hamburger stand. Waiting for customer, Alpine, Texas; May 1939; Russell Lee


Booth in hamburger stand, Alpine, Texas; May 1939; Russell Lee


Man in hamburger stand, Alpine, Texas; May 1939; Russell Lee


Little boy buying hamburger, state fair, Donaldsonville, Louisiana; November 1938; Russell Lee


Hamburger stand with old brands, Dumas, Texas; September 1939; Russell Lee


A hamburger shop in Durham, North Carolina; May 1940; Jack Delano


Hamburger stand and back of buildings on main street, Eufaula, Oklahoma; February 1940; Russell Lee


Hamburger stand, Harlingen, Texas; February 1939; Russell Lee


Hamburger stand. Imperial County Fair, California; March 1942; Russell Lee


Hamburger stand. Imperial County Fair, California; March 1942; Russell Lee


Blue Island, Illinois. After a movie, the Senise family drops in at a lunch counter for hamburgers; February 1943; Jack Delano


Washington, D.C. Walter Spangenberg and his date at the Hot Shoppe after the Woodrow Wilson High School regimental ball. She ordered a hamburger and milk, while he got a hamburger and a Coke; October 1943; Esther Bubley


At the hamburger stand on the Fourth of July, Vale, Oregon; July 1941; Russell Lee


White Tavern hamburger stand was the popular place in Amsterdam, New York; October 1941; John Collier


White Tavern hamburger stand was the popular place in Amsterdam, New York; October 1941; John Collier


Woodville, California. FSA (Farm Security Administration) farm workers' community. Migrant agricultural workers eating hamburgers at the Saturday night dance; January 1942; Russell Lee


Woodville, California. FSA (Farm Security Administration) farm workers' community. The women's club sells hamburgers at the Saturday night dances; January 1942; Russell Lee

20060517LOCBurger.jpg
Farmer eats hamburger at cornhusking contest, Marshall County, Iowa; November 1939; Arthur Rothstein

1 Comment:

Talk about a blast from the past!

While I don't remember the hamburger stand pictured, I do have many memories of Dumas. I do remember a hamburger drive-in type stand located on the highway where we used to get a hamburger. I wonder if there was any relation.

My grandmother moved to Dumas, Texas when she was a child. She traveled with her family via covered wagon from Tupelo, Ms. and settled in Dumas. She lived there, was married there, raised her family there and died there at the ripe old age of 98 back in 1981. Her husband farmed land very close to Dumas which they lived on prior to moving to town. He died when my Mom was close to graduating from Dumas High School.

I can remember going to several high school football playoff games when the Demons were in the playoffs. The majority of my Mom's family stayed in or near Dumas and we used to visit for several weeks every summer. One year my sister and I were lucky enough to be a part of the Dogie Days Parade. I also can remember going on wheat harvests and riding in the combines. I learned to play bridge when we visited Dumas. Smoked my first and only grapevine one summer in Dumas and learned how to climb and pick cherries from a cherry tree in the backyard of my Grandma's house.

The original farm has grown and is still being farmed by a descendant of my Grandma's. Unfortunately there's only one person left who might remember eating at the hamburger stand you have a picture of. If she was the least bit computer savy, I'd send it to her and ask her about any history she might know about it.

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