" WALT'S POSTCARDS Presents
CHARLES
WEIDNER/GOEGGEL & WEIDNER
Biography
NOT FOR SALE "
NOTICE: This Reference list for Charles Weidner is for individual personal
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CHARLES WEIDNER
l866 - l940 (Credits Liselotte Glozer & David Parry)
CHARLES WEIDNER, San Francisco photographer and postcard publisher, was born in
Germany in 1866 and came to the United States around l880. He maintained a
photographic studio in San Francisco for many years and began publishing numbered
postcards under the imprint of Goeggel & Weidner in 1900. The name Goeggel was
dropped from the cards after number 111, around 1903. However, because Weidner
reprinted his own cards to fill demand, identical cards appear with and without
the Goeggel imprint, with either divided or undivided backs.
Weidner published up to 694 numbered cards - the highest number we have located -
as well as unnumbered lithographs; a 58 card set of the Panama Pacific
International Exposition printed by the Albertype Co. in 1915; and numerous real
photo cards, including a set commemorating the visit of the Pacific Fleet to
San Francisco, and other locally historic events. Most of his numbered cards were
chromolithographs, but he also released black and whites, and several cyanid and
sepia cards, as well as several striking embossed (bas relief) cards.
Weidner also sold his photographs to other postcard publishers, including Newman,
Pacific Novelty and Rieder. These can sometimes be identified by a cut line that
reads "photo only copyright by Charles Weidner." In addition, his photographs
appeared in contemporary books, including Gertrude Atherton's "California, An
Intimate History" and at least two books on the San Francisco earthquake of 1906,
where the photos are not credited, but easily recognized because Weidner himself
had published the same images as postcards. In contradistinction to other postcard
publishers, Weidner used only his own photographs, and he had them printed by the
firms of Louis Glaser in Leipzig and Stengel & Co. in Dresden. Glaser also
lithographed many of the Detroit Company's postcards and there is - especially
in a series of Yosemite cards - a great visual similarity between
Detroit and Weidner cards.
Like the late Herb Caen, Charles Weidner could have been called "Mr. San
Francisco." He photographed the city with a loving eye: the downtown business
district, Golden Gate Park (the caroussel, groups of listeners at outdoor
concerts), hotels, and the picturesque side of Chinatown. The San Francisco views
were followed by cards of the outlying districts: Berkeley and the University of
California, as well as the now "yuppie" suburbs of Marin County, then dotted with
small towns. Regular trips seem to have taken him farther afield: to the orchards
of Santa Clara Valley (now known as Silicon Valley), to San Jose, the beaches of
Santa Cruz, and wooded Yosemite. After returning to San Francisco he often
repeated visits to previously photographed sites. Once he journeyed as far North
as the Oregon border and another time he went to the Southland, where he took in
the Cawston Ostrich farm, Catalina Island, and other landmarks.
Weidner's pattern of traveling, returning to the city, and then journeying
outwards again was only interrupted by a series of cards of the San Francisco
earthquake of l906, starting with number 202 and ending with the number 250.
If viewed together, they give the impression of a man relentlessly driven to
bequeath to the future a record of the ruined city he had depicted so glowingly
before. The earthquake series is followed by 5 chromolitho cards titled: "One
year after the fire" and a black and white card titled "Watch San Francisco Grow:
Ruins 1906, 1 Year Later, Today" the images arranged like a "Gruss Aus" card.
With the outbreak of World War One, chromolitho postcards could no longer be
printed in Germany and Weidner tried himself in black and white cards. But the
golden age of postcard collecting had come to an end, and with it his publishing
career. In his later years, Weidner was a staff photographer at the San Francisco
Examiner, Sunset Magazine, and Camera Craft. He died in 1940.
REF:Research on Weidner first published by Liselotte Glozer
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