Hine, Lewis Wickes

Hine, Lewis Wickes
born Sept. 26, 1874, Oshkosh, Wis., U.S.
died Nov. 3, 1940, Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y.

U.S. photographer.

He was trained as a sociologist. In 1904 he began to photograph immigrants at Ellis Island and the tenements and sweatshops where they lived and worked. In 1911 he was hired by the National Child Labor Committee to record child labour conditions. Traveling throughout the East, he produced appalling pictures of exploited children. In World War I he worked as a photographer with the Red Cross. On returning to New York City, he photographed the construction of the Empire State Building. For the rest of his life he photographed government projects.

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▪ American photographer

born Sept. 26, 1874, Oshkosh, Wis., U.S.
died Nov. 3, 1940, Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y.
 American photographer who used his art to bring social ills to public attention.

      Trained as a sociologist, Hine began to portray the immigrants who crowded onto New York's Ellis Island in 1905. He also photographed the tenements and sweatshops where the immigrants were forced to live and work. These pictures were published in 1908 in Charities and the Commons (later Survey).

      In 1909 Hine published “Child Labor in the Carolinas” and “Day Laborers Before Their Time,” the first of his many photo stories documenting child labour. These photo stories included such pictures as “Breaker Boys Inside the Coal Breaker” and “Little Spinner in Carolina Cotton Mill,” showing children as young as eight years old working long hours in dangerous conditions. Two years later, he was hired by the National Child Labor Committee to explore more extensively child-labour conditions in the United States. Hine traveled throughout the eastern half of the United States, gathering appalling pictures of exploited children and the slums in which they lived. He kept a careful record of his conversations with the children by secretly taking notes inside his coat pocket and photographing birth entries in family Bibles. He measured the children's heights by the buttons on his vest.

      Late in World War I Hine served as a photographer with the Red Cross. After the Armistice he remained with the Red Cross in the Balkans, and in 1919 he published the photo story “The Children's Burden in the Balkans.”

      Returning to New York City, he was hired to record the construction of the Empire State Building, then the tallest building in the world. To get the proper angle for certain pictures of the skyscraper, Hine had himself swung out over the city streets in a basket or bucket suspended from a crane or other device. In 1932 these photographs were published as Men at Work. The remainder of his life was spent documenting government projects.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Hine, Lewis Wickes — (26 sep. 1874, Oshkosh, Wis., EE.UU.–3 nov. 1940, Hastings on Hudson, N.Y.). Fotógrafo estadounidense. Se formó como sociólogo. En 1904 comenzó a fotografiar inmigrantes en la isla Ellis, en los tugurios donde vivían y las fábricas donde se los… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Lewis Wickes Hine — Kraftwerksarbeiter an einer Dampfmaschine Lewis Wickes Hine (* 26. September 1874 in Oshkosh, Wisconsin; † 4. November 1940 in Hastings on Hudson, New York) war Zeichenlehrer, Sozialarbeiter …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Lewis Wickes Hine — Lewis Hine Naissance 16 septembre 1874 Oshkosh (Wisconsin Décès 3 novembre 1940 (à 66 ans) Activité(s) Photographe …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Lewis Hine — Lewis Wickes Hine (September 26, 1874 – November 3, 1940), was an American photographer. For Hine, the camera was both a research tool and an instrument of social reform.Early lifeBorn in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, in 1874. After his father died in an… …   Wikipedia

  • Lewis — El nombre Lewis puede hacer referencia a las siguientes personas: ● Arthur Lewis, Sir William Arthur Lewis, economista británico (Santa Lucía, 1915 Barbados, 1991). Premio Nobel de economía en 1979. ● Carl Lewis, Carlton McHinley Lewis, atleta… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • lewis — /looh is/, n. a device for lifting a dressed stone, consisting of a number of pieces fitting together to fill a dovetailed recess cut into the stone. [1730 40; perh. after the surname of the inventor] * * * (as used in expressions) Ferdinand… …   Universalium

  • Lewis — /looh is/, n. 1. C(ecil) Day, 1904 72, British poet: poet laureate after 1968. 2. C(live) S(taples) /stay peuhlz/, ( Clive Hamilton ), 1898 1963, English novelist and essayist. 3. Gilbert Newton, 1875 1946, U.S. chemist. 4. (Harry) Sinclair, 1885 …   Universalium

  • Lewis Hine — Lewis Wickes Hine Cet article fait partie de la série Photographie …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Hine —   [haɪn], Lewis Wickes, amerikanischer Fotograf, * Oshkosh (Wisconsin) 26. 9. 1874, ✝ Hastings on Hudson (New York) 3. 11. 1940; Pionier der sozialdokumentarischen Fotografie. Hine schuf Reportagen über die Slums in New York, die Probleme der… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Lewis Hine — Kraftwerksarbeiter an einer Dampfmaschine Lewis Wickes Hine (* 26. September 1874 in Oshkosh, Wisconsin; † 4. November 1940 in Hastings on Hudson, New York) war Zeichenlehrer und sozialdokumentarischer Fotograf …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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