Yorkshire Post

Dracula’s creator brought back to life in archive

Historic photograph­s that tell many forgotten chapters of city’s story go on sale from vast online database

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT Email: david.behrens@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IT WAS perhaps the first paparazzi photograph, and one that captured a theatrical drama the playwright had not foreseen.

Sir Henry Irving, the great actor-manager of the Victorian stage, had declaimed Tennyson’s prophetic words, “Into Thy Hands, O Lord”, when he exited the stage at Bradford’s Theatre Royal, returned to his room at the Midland Hotel and, as the local paper put it the next day, “expired”.

It fell to his business manager, Bram Stoker, to tell his cast the next morning that as a consequenc­e, they were all out of a job.

A photograph­er captured the scene as Stoker – who, eight years earlier had written his Gothic masterpiec­e, Dracula inspired by the brooding Abbey above Whitby – left the theatre, umbrella in hand.

It is one of thousands of small moments of local history that could have been lost to the ages. But yesterday, preserved and restored, they all went on sale in a vast online archive.

“The clues are in the detail,” said John Ashton, photograph­ic archive assistant at Bradford Industrial Museum, on whose third floor the pictures are held.

“There’s a dray house passing and the dray is empty, so it must have been taken mid-morning, when the beer had all been delivered. And it was clearly taken by someone who had been waiting for just that shot. A kind of a 1905 paparazzi.”

Bradford has an unusually large archive of photograph­s in civic hands, including that of the Belle Vue studio, which from 1902 to the 1970s took portraits of sitting families. Latterly, these were newly-arrived residents from the Indian subcontine­nt, who posed with ball point pens in their top pockets and a transistor radio on the sideboard, to demonstrat­e to their families back home their new-found wealth.

“But their possession­s were often just studio props,” Mr Ashton said. “The same radio crops up again and again.”

The online archive also includes the work of the commercial photograph­y business CH Wood, which was active in Bradford from 1930 until two decades ago.

Among its jewels are an aerial shot of a record 102,000 crowd at the city’s Odsal Stadium, when Halifax played Warrington in a replay of the 1954 Challenge Cup Final.

“It was a sought-after picture,” Mr Ashton said. “Companies would buy a copy and ask CH Wood to write their name on the roofs of the stands.”

But it is another early piece of photo manipulati­on that stands out in the archive.

The amateur photograph­er Christophe­r Pratt, the wealthy grandson of the founder of a famous furniture firm, made it his business to illustrate the poor families who lived in the backto-backs that lined Bradford’s streets.

On his pictures were mottos that illuminate­d his Methodist mantra. “In the darkest spot on earth, some love is found.”

Outside Popplewell’s offlicence, a woman covers a jug of ale with a shawl, but Pratt had directed his printer to replace the licensee’s name over the door with the more direct legend, “ales and stouts”, by way of a warning about the perils of drink.

“It’s the sort of thing we show to students, to remind them that Photoshop isn’t a new technique,” Mr Ashton said. “People were cutting and pasting in the days when it literally meant using a pot of glue.”

Someone had been waiting for just that shot. A kind of a 1905 paparazzi John Ashton, photograph­ic archive assistant at Bradford Industrial Museum

 ?? MAIN PICTURE: JONATHAN GAWTHORPE. ?? Curator John Ashton with some of the old Bradford prints now available online including a snatched shot of Dracula’s creator Bram Stoker, below left, leaving the theatre after sacking his company following the death of Sir Henry Irving; centre, a woman emerges from an off licence; right, a worker in Salts Mill. EXIT, STAGE LEFT:
MAIN PICTURE: JONATHAN GAWTHORPE. Curator John Ashton with some of the old Bradford prints now available online including a snatched shot of Dracula’s creator Bram Stoker, below left, leaving the theatre after sacking his company following the death of Sir Henry Irving; centre, a woman emerges from an off licence; right, a worker in Salts Mill. EXIT, STAGE LEFT:

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