Adirondack Life

TREASURE TROVE

HOUGH BY FAR the better known, Seneca Ray Stoddard and Jesse Wooley are not the only commercial photographers to have trained their lenses on Lake George. Two less prominent though equally industrious photographers, Jule Thatcher (1856–1934) and his son and successor Fred Thatcher (1881–1969), also chronicled life

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Adirondack Life

Adirondack Life1 min read
Back Page
Jeff Nadler, who photographed this porky, calls him a “tree cutie,” and has a series of shots—see jnphoto.net—of the prickly rodents that will make your heart melt. Yes, porcupines have thousands of loosely attached quills that will barb into predato
Adirondack Life2 min read
The Blackfly Diva
Just as late winter melts into chilly, muddy spring, Andrea Malik will bushwhack through miles of deep woods in Colton, on the northwestern edge of the Adirondack Park. She’ll slog through frigid marshes, up slippery ridges, and across beaver dams. A
Adirondack Life5 min read
Starred Review
Kathleen Carroll, during a distinguished career as movie critic for the New York Daily News, wrote about films and celebrities. Robert Redford confided to her that he longed for a time when he was no longer “fashionable” as he eased into directing mo

Related