Pennsylvania Horticultural Society - Jay V. Hare Lantern Slide Collection

Active Filters:
  • Date = [1920-1940]
  • Original Format = Lantern Slides
  • Location Covered = Kyoto (Japan)

About This Collection

Jay Veeder Hare (1878 -1953) was born in Schodack, New York. He attended the Peirce School in Philadelphia and graduated from Temple University Law School. He began his long career with the Reading Company in 1897 as a junior clerk who rose through the ranks, retiring from the railroad in 1945 as secretary and treasurer of the Reading Company, parent company of the Reading Railway System. He wrote the first in-depth history of the Reading Company. He was an avid gardener and a founder of the Trevose Horticultural Society in Trevose, Pennsylvania, where he lived at Hareacres with his wife Jean (Weber) Hare and daughters Jean and Nancy. He was a member of the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society’s executive council from 1929 to 1949. Mr. Hare gave many illustrated lectures on plants and gardens based on his extensive world travels. He obtained lantern slides from commercial photography houses such as Williams, Brown & Earle and the William H. Rau Company in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; T.Takagi Photo Company in Kobe, Japan and T. Ikeda in Tokyo, Japan; Lévy et Neurdein Réunis in Paris, France; and Arxiu Mas in Barcelona, Spain. His lectures were supplemented by his own photography. The collection is strong in images from Japan, Italy, Spain, the United States and Switzerland, with representation from Bermuda, England, Ireland, France, Monaco, Germany, New Zealand, and South Africa. The images, many of which are hand-colored, depict typical or famous gardens, well-known city parks, tourist views of areas of spectacular natural beauty such as waterfalls and picturesque coastlines, as well as individual plant portraits. Many of the gardens and much of the landscape have changed significantly in the past 100 years or have disappeared entirely. For example, the views of Japan include chrysanthemum festivals, Japanese gardens, flower arranging for tea ceremonies, tea gardens, farmers picking tea leaves, and men, women and children in traditional Japanese dress – all evoke a time that no longer exists. In addition to an avid interest in gardens and plants, Jay V. Hare was also a birder and member of the Delaware Valley Ornithological Club. The lantern slide collection was given to PHS McLean Library & Archives by daughter Nancy Veeder Koltes in 2008.This digital project is supported in part by a National Endowment for the Humanities Sustaining the Humanities Through the American Rescue Plan (SHARP) grant.

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Japan. Kyoto. Autumn tints at Kinkakuji
Japan. Kyoto. Bronze dragon sprout
Japan. Kyoto. Canal from Lake Biwa
Japan. Kyoto. Cherry Avenue at Chion-in
Japan. Kyoto. Cherry blossoms at Arashiyama
Japan. Kyoto. Cherry blossoms at Kiyomidzu
Japan. Kyoto. Cherry Dance
Japan. Kyoto. Garden of Ginkakuji
Japan. Kyoto. Ginkakuji Garden in snow
Japan. Kyoto. Ginkakuji Gardens
Japan. Kyoto. Higashi-Otani
Japan. Kyoto. Interior of a Temple
Japan. Kyoto. Iris garden at Umenomiya
Japan. Kyoto. Katsura detached palace
Japan. Kyoto. Lotus pond and "Spectacle Bridge" at Nishi-Otani
Japan. Kyoto. Picnic party at Arashiyama
Japan. Kyoto. Sambo-in garden
Japan. Kyoto. The Garden of Ninnaji
Japan. Kyoto. Togetsu Kyo (Bridge) at Arashiyama
Japan. [Series]. "Characteristic Gardens in Japan"