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Thomas Warren Sears photograph collection

Smithsonian Gardens

Object Details

Creator
Sears, Thomas Warren, 1880-1966
Sears & Wendell
Olmsted Brothers
Harvard University
American Society of Landscape Architects
Donor
Tibbetts, Eleanor Sears
Topic
Landscape architecture
Topic
Photographers
Landscape architects
Gardens -- United States
Gardens -- Switzerland
Gardens -- Scotland
Gardens -- Italy
Gardens -- Germany
Gardens -- France
Gardens -- England
Provenance
Gift of Eleanor Sears Tibbetts, Sears' daughter, to the Horticulture Services Division (later Smithsonian Gardens) in 1992.
Creator
Sears, Thomas Warren, 1880-1966
Sears & Wendell
Olmsted Brothers
Harvard University
American Society of Landscape Architects
See more items in
Thomas Warren Sears photograph collection
Summary
The Thomas Warren Sears Photograph Collection documents examples of the design work of Thomas Warren Sears (1880-1966), a landscape architect and amateur photographer from Brookline, Massachusetts. Sears, who was based for most of his career in Philadelphia, designed a variety of different types of landscapes ranging from private residences, schools, and playgrounds to parks, cemeteries, and urban housing developments located primarily in Pennsylvania, Maryland, and New York. In addition to some of Sears' design work, images in the collection document Sears' domestic and foreign travels, design inspirations, and family. The collection includes over 4,800 black and white negatives and glass lantern slides dated circa 1899 to 1930. While most images show private and public gardens, there are a significant number of unidentified views and views photographed in Europe during two trips he took there in 1906 and 1908. Few images are captioned or dated. In addition, there are over 50 plans and drawings, most notably for Balmuckety in Pikesville, Maryland and Reynolda in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and 3 monographs by or about Sears.
Biographical/Historical note
Thomas Warren Sears was born in 1880 in Brookline, Massachusetts. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Harvard University in 1903 and Bachelor of Science degree in landscape architecture from the Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard in 1906. Sears was an amateur photographer who won awards for his photography while at Harvard. In 1915 his images were published in the monograph, Parish Churches of England. After graduation he worked for the firm of Olmsted Brothers Landscape Architects for two years and then briefly practiced in Providence, Rhode Island. In 1913, Sears established a landscape design office in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where he spent the remainder of his professional career. Sears at one point was in a professional partnership; some of his design plans list the firm name of Sears and Wendell. He was made a Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects in 1921. Sears designed many different types of landscapes ranging from private residences, schools, and playgrounds to parks, cemeteries, and urban housing developments. His designs were primarily located in Pennsylvania, Maryland, and New York. Just a few of his private landscapes include Marengo in Easton, Maryland; Sunnybrook, the Isaac H. Clothier, Jr. estate in Radnor, Pennsylvania; and Balmuckety in Pikesville, Maryland. In 1915, Sears started work on Reynolda, a country estate in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He generated design plans for the property intermittently over the next two decades. Reynolda's formal gardens, greenhouses, and acres of fields and woodlands subsequently became part of Wake Forest University. During World War I, Sears designed Army camps in Battle Creek, Michigan and Spartanburg, South Carolina. He also helped lay out Langley Field, at that time an experimental aviation field in Hampton Roads, Virginia. In the 1940s, Sears designed the amphitheater at Swarthmore College in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania for concerts, outdoor performances, and other special events. During that decade he also worked on Colonial Revival gardens at Pennsbury, William Penn's country estate in Bucks County, Pennsylvania located by the Delaware River. Sears retired in 1964 and died in 1966.
Extent
44.5 Cubic feet (4,317 glass negatives. 363 film negatives. 182 glass lantern slides. 12 photograph albums. 56 plans and drawings. 3 monographs. )
Date
1899-1964
Custodial History note
Sears' daughter, Eleanor Sears Tibbetts, deposited the Thomas Warren Sears Collection with the Winterthur Museum's Garden Department around 1991. Winterthur subsequently decided not to acquire the collection and it was then donated by Mrs. Tibbetts to the Smithsonian's Horticulture Services Division (now Smithsonian Gardens). The collection was transferred to HSD in the plastic crates which Winterthur had used to store it.
Archival Repository
Archives of American Gardens
Identifier
AAG.SRS
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Negatives
Blueprints
Albums
Plans (drawings)
Lantern slides
Citation
Smithsonian Institution, Archives of American Gardens, Thomas Warren Sears photograph collection.
Arrangement note
The glass plate negatives were originally housed in numerous cardboard boxes manufactured for the sale of undeveloped glass plate negatives. Sears annotated the outside of the boxes with project or client names and/or locations, but the contents do not always match these labels. In addition, because very few of the glass plate negatives and lantern slides were labeled or captioned, it is not always evident where one job ended and another began if multiple projects were stored in the same carton. As a result, there are many instances in the Sears Collection where images have been inadvertently mislabeled because their identification is not apparent. Misidentified images are subject to correction as their proper identification is discovered. Each project has been assigned its own unique AAG job number based on its geographic origin. Those groups of images that have not been identified as to their location have been assigned a project number starting with 'SRS.' The collection is arranged into 3 series: 1) Photographic images (including glass plate negatives, film negatives, glass lantern slides, and photograph albums) 2) Plans and Drawings 3) Monographs
Processing Information note
The collection was processed by Smithsonian staffers Paula Healy and Marca Woodhams and Smithsonian volunteer Nancy Sahli.
Rights
Archives of American Gardens encourages the use of its archival materials for non-commercial, educational and personal use under the fair use provision of U.S. copyright law. Use or copyright restrictions may exist. It is incumbent upon the researcher to ascertain copyright status and assume responsibility for usage. All requests for duplication and use must be submitted in writing and approved by Archives of American Gardens. Please direct reference inquiries to the Archives of American Gardens: aag@si.edu.
Genre/Form
Negatives
Blueprints
Albums
Plans (drawings)
Lantern slides
Other Finding Aids note
An item-level inventory of the photographic images in the Thomas Warren Sears Collection was generated by Marie Martin, an appraisor of 19th and 20th century photography, for the collection's donor (Sears' daughter), Eleanor S. Tibbetts. Martin inventoried the collection from December 1992 to February 1993 after it had been donated to the Smithsonian's Horticulture Services Division (later Smithsonian Gardens); she submitted copies of the completed inventory to Mrs. Tibbetts and to the Smithsonian in March 1993.
Scope and Contents note
The Thomas Warren Sears Photograph Collection documents examples of the design work of Thomas Warren Sears (1880-1966), a landscape architect and amateur photographer from Brookline, Massachusetts. Sears, who was based for most of his career in Philadelphia, designed a variety of different types of landscapes ranging from private residences, schools, and playgrounds to parks, cemeteries, and urban housing developments located primarily in Pennsylvania, Maryland, and New York. In addition to some of Sears' design work, images in the collection document Sears' domestic and foreign travels, design inspirations, and family. The collection includes over 4,800 black and white negatives and glass lantern slides dated circa 1899 to 1930. While most images show private and public gardens, there are a significant number of unidentified views and views photographed in Europe during two trips he took there in 1906 and 1908. Few images are captioned or dated. In addition, there are over 50 plans and drawings, most notably for Balmuckety in Pikesville, Maryland and Reynolda in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and monographs by or about Sears. Several of the glass lantern slides are duplicates of glass plate negatives in the collection. They apparently were chosen by Sears to illustrate some of his best design work, perhaps for lecture or client purposes. In addition, there are 56 plans and drawings, most notably for Balmuckety in Pikesville, Maryland and Reynolda in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. They range in date from 1917 to 1937 and from 1955 to 1964. Sears photographed some of his early plans; they are included in with the photographic images. Sears also photographed a handful of design plans by landscape architect Sibley Coslett Smith who practiced in Providence, Rhode Island; Sears and Smith shared the same business address there. The Thomas Warren Sears Collection does not fully document the extent of Sears' design work. The use of glass plate negatives—which make up the bulk of the Thomas Warren Sears Collection—as a photography medium waned sometime during the first quarter of the twentieth century. As a result, the images in the Sears Collection capture examples of Sears' early to mid-career design work but they do not include jobs designed by Sears during the latter half of his design career.
Restrictions
Access to original archival materials by appointment only. Researcher must submit request for appointment in writing. Certain items may be restricted and not available to researchers. Please direct reference inquiries to the Archives of American Gardens: aag@si.edu.
Related Archival Materials note
The Philadelphia Architects and Buildings Project (PAB), administered by The Athenaeum of Philadelphia, includes references to design projects by Sears. Harvard University's Loeb Library includes a number of images by Sears, some of them documenting gardens that he designed. Harvard University's Fine Arts Library, Special Collections includes a collection of photographs and negatives of English parish churches by Sears, c. 1908. Some of the images were published in the monograph, Parish Churches of England. The Reynolda House Museum of American Art in Winston-Salem, North Carolina includes plans by Sears of Reynolda in its Estate Archives.
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1562707900944-1562707901728-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/kb68e184341-59d2-4612-8886-4cc747c92bfe

In the Collection

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  • Unidentified Garden

  • Villa Lante: an overview of the garden and its fountains.

  • Unidentified House Under Construction in Unknown Location: looking uphill toward the site, showing several fully grown trees.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Shere, Surrey, England, and Vicinity, Series 2: a farm in an unidentified location.

  • Beacon Street & Commonwealth Avenue: looking north from the Back Bay Fens toward Boylston Street, with the Hotel Canterbury in the distance.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Middletown, Rhode Island: Unidentified field with houses

  • Unidentified Sites in England: an unidentified cottage and its garden.

  • Unidentified Garden

  • Unidentified Landscape

  • Muskau Park and Vicinity: a view over the rooftops of Bad Muskau toward the New Castle.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Scotland: Kelso Abbey, showing its Romanesque west tower.

  • Watch Hill

  • Swanson Garden

  • Annapolis -- James Brice House

  • Unidentified Garden

  • John Brown House: plantings on the grounds of the house.

  • Olmsted Park: Leverett Pond, with the Sears Memorial Chapel barely visible in the far distance.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in New Hampshire, Series 1: children playing in a stream in Intervale, looking north.

  • Franco-British Exhibition, 1908: the Court of Honor, with the British Textiles Building on the left.

  • Charles Garden

  • Miscellaneous Sites in London, England: Trafalgar Square, with the church of St. Martin-in-the-Fields in the background.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Somerville, Massachusetts: a road in the vicinity of Nathan Tufts Park.

  • Watch Hill

  • Unidentified Garden

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Glen Ridge, New Jersey: the Ridgewood Avenue Lackawanna railroad station and platform.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Branscombe, Devon, England: looking toward the village from Stockham's Hill.

  • Pine Valley Golf Club: the lake that crosses the 5th hole; the hole is not visible.

  • Unidentified Seascape

  • Harvard University

  • Unidentified Garden

  • Harvard University

  • DeWitt Clinton Park: an aerial view of the park, looking toward the Hudson River.

  • Miscellaneous Trees, Shrubs and Plants: branches of an unidentified flowering tree.

  • Sears Garden

  • Fontainebleau: the formal gardens, with the château in the background.

  • Versailles: the Latona fountain, with the Apollo fountain in the far distance.

  • Fontainebleau: the château's formal gardens and adjacent pleached tree allées.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in France, Series 1: an unidentified location, probably in the Bois de Boulogne.

  • Orchards: clematis on a stone wall adjacent to the terrace.

  • Unidentified Sites: a pond or other waterway, probably in a park, in an unidentified location.

  • Harvard University: Dormitory Room.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in France, Series 1: an unidentified location, probably in the Bois de Boulogne.

  • Miscelleous Sites in Warwickshire, England: a group of houses along a road in an unidentified location.

  • Shere Church: looking toward the church and its its 1901 lych gate, designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens.

  • Skibo

  • Nuneham House and Park: thatched cottage and River Thames at Nuneham Park, with Nuneham House visible in the distance.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Glen Ridge, New Jersey: 60 Douglas Road.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Nottinghamshire, England: an unidentified courtyard, possibly connected to a hotel such as the French Horn in Worksop.

  • Grasmere -- Miscellaneous Sites in Lake District

  • Wellesley -- Hunnewell Pinetum

  • Chanticleer

  • Bougemont: the portico/porch and surrounding shrubs and trees.

  • Orchards: the formal Dutch Garden, with its flagstone paving and a lion's head wall fountain at the far end.

  • Satterwaite Garden

  • Nuneham House and Park: Nuneham Park Bridge and thatched cottage along the River Thames.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in the Adirondack Mountains: an unidentified location, possibly in the Lake Placid area.

  • Unidentified Garden in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

  • Miscellaneous Sites in the Lake District: buildings in Coniston, including the "Old Butcher's Shop" on the lower left.

  • Harvard University

  • Miscellaneous Sites in the Lake District: Dove Cottage in Grasmere, once the home of poet William Wordsworth.

  • Ward Garden

  • Versailles: looking through trees toward the distant Grand Trianon.

  • Brady Garden

  • Unidentified Landscapes, Seascapes and People

  • Baldwin Garden: the house and grounds, with a shaded porch seating area.

  • Reynolda: the Reynolds children sitting on the lake porch and terrace along the north facade of Reynolda house.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Kennebunkport, Maine: breakwater and sailboat at the mouth of the Kennebunk River.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Boston, Massachusetts: looking across Boston Harbor toward East Boston, with naval and other ships, including the U.S.S. Indiana on the left.

  • Unidentified Garden

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, England: Church Street, looking toward Guild Chapel in the far right distance, with novelist Marie Corelli's home, "Mason Croft," in the left foreground.

  • Versailles: looking toward the palace from the Apollo fountain.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Fowey, Cornwall, England: looking toward Boddinick-by-Fowey.

  • Hampton Court: a plan of the gardens at Hampton Court, Herefordshire.

  • Walmarthon: a view of the house, featuring courtyards and the solarium.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Clovelly, Devon, England: fishing boats and rowboats in the harbor at high tide.

  • Portrait of an Unidentified Man

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Reading, Pennsylvania: an unidentified site, presumably in or near Reading.

  • Chestnutwold Farm glass negative: driveway and entrance to the property.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Middletown, Rhode Island: agricultural fields near St. George's School, with school buildings and other structures in the far distance.

  • Swanson Garden

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Salem, Massachusetts: the garden at 26 Chestnut Street, showing an old pump and trough repurposed as a garden ornament and planter.

  • Chatsworth Estate: a house in the estate village of Edensor.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Brookline, Massachusetts: 135 Ivy Street, designed by George Minot Dexter for Amos A. Lawrence in 1851.

  • Maryland State Normal School (Towson University): part of what would become the campus, before construction, showing existing road or driveway.

  • Pottsville -- Zerbe Garden

  • Lawrence Garden: house and grounds under construction.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Ledbury, Herefordshire, England: a thatch roofed building with a church tower behind, in an unidentified location.

  • Thomas Garden

  • Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte: the château and its gardens.

  • Holly Beach Farm: looking across a lawn to the house.

  • Unidentified Landscape

  • Harvard University

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Brookline, Massachusetts: view from the Sears family home, looking south.

  • Holm Lea

  • Unidentified Landscape

  • Unidentified Garden

  • Miscellaneous Sites in New Hampshire, Series 1: Jackson, New Hampshire, with a partial view of some of the old Wentworth Hall hotel buildings behind the trees in the lower left center of the image.

  • Harvard Botanic Garden: Veronica repens ?

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Providence, Rhode Island: the auditorium in the Rhode Island Medical Society Library Building, 106 Francis Street.

  • Miscellaneous Sites in Kennebunkport, Maine: Gooch's Beach.

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Thomas Warren Sears [slide]
There are restrictions for re-using this image. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page .
International media Interoperability Framework
IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more.
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