Highlights Archives
Gerhard Gesell's Alma: Mississippi River Town
Gerhard Gesell's prolific career as a photographer began in Reads Landing, Minnesota, in 1873, but three years later he moved across the Mississippi River to Alma, Wisconsin, where he opened a photography studio at 401 S. Main Street. There, Gesell carefully documented the town, its people and culture, capturing the integral role the Mississippi River played in the lives of the people of Alma. Gesell's images of daily life on the river and of his family are the subject of this month's featured gallery from Wisconsin Historical Images, the Society's online image database.
Gesell (pronounced guh-ZEL), born in Germany, came to Minnesota, where two of his brothers already lived, in 1863. Shortly after arriving, Gesell enlisted in the Army and served with Brackett's Battalion of the Minnesota Cavalry in the western frontier until the end of the Civil War.
Returning to Reads Landing after the war, Gesell worked as a saloonkeeper until he became a photographer in 1873. In 1876 he relocated to Alma, located alongside the Mississippi River bluffs, and opened his own photography studio. Gesell married Christine Giesen in 1879, and the couple had five children: Arnold, Gerhard Jr., Robert, Bertha and Wilma. Their eldest son, Arnold, became a well-known figure nationally in the field of psychology and infamous in Alma for an unflattering portrayal of his hometown in an article titled "Village of a Thousand Souls." Arnold's son and Gesell's grandson, also named Gerhard, became a judge for the Federal District Court in Washington, D.C., where he presided over several significant cases including the Watergate scandal, the Iran-contra affair, and the release of the Pentagon Papers. Judge Gesell was a strong civil libertarian who stood against the abuse of governmental power.
Gesell's family is well represented in the collection of photographs. One can trace the children from infancy to adulthood through the photographs. We get a glimpse into family traditions as well as the family's sense of humor and fun.
While Gesell did take studio portraits, his finest work was done in the field. Rather than have his subjects come to him, Gesell frequently went to them, capturing Alma's townspeople swimming, boating, birling logs and harvesting ice, among other things.
He captured the natural beauty and utilitarian nature of the Mississippi River and the unique features of small towns nestled between the river and the nearby bluffs. Of particular interest are his photographs of logging operations at Beef Slough, once one of the world's largest lumber sorting and rafting works. Beef Slough Manufacturing, Booming, Log Driving & Transportation Co. employed more than 600 men in the 1880s, a time when the population of Alma was about 1,500. Today the waterway through which much of Wisconsin's original pine forest timber passed is a mere trickle due to damming upriver. Its usefulness long past, Gesell's photographs ensure that this stretch of river and the role it played are not forgotten.
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:: Posted November 13, 2008
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