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Details

Latitude
-34.9275
Longitude
138.6
Start Date
1845-01-01
End Date
1845-01-01

Description

Sources

ID
tba68e

Extended Data

DAAO URL
https://www.daao.org.au/bio/richard-john-alexander-hall
Birth Place
Adelaide, SA, Australia
Biography
Richard Hall was the son of ‘Professor’ Robert Hall of Hindley Street, one of South Australia’s early photographers. He was born in Adelaide on 28 December 1845, nine years after the state was founded, and within months of the first photographs being taken in the colony. When only 16 years old Richard Hall had a narrow escape when returning from practice at the rifle butts. The horse drawing his phaeton bolted down Hindley Street, throwing out the occupants, the empty vehicle then capsizing at Morphett Street and, being lightly constructed, it was a total wreck. In March 1864 the Illustrated Melbourne Post published an engraving of Government House, Adelaide, engraved by Samuel Calvert from a stereoscopic photograph taken by Richard Hall, who by this time appears to have been working in his father’s studio in Hindley Street. Another of Richard Hall’s photographs, copied by a less competent engraver, appeared in the Illustrated Melbourne Post for September 1865 with the caption ‘Mons. Vertelli walking across the Mount Lofty Waterfall on a wire’. The engraving was criticised by the Register for being ‘neither truthful nor spirited’, and for giving an incorrect representation of the scene for which there was no excuse, as a photograph of the wire-walking feat had been supplied to the ‘artist’. At the South Australian Society of Arts annual exhibition in December 1865, when just twenty years old, Richard Hall was awarded two prizes: one for the best set of six photographic views; the other for the best set of six stereoscopic photographs. Richard Hall’s photographer–father, Professor Robert Hall, died in August 1866, and references to a photographer named Hall after that date would almost certainly belong to Richard Hall. The photographers Hall & Edwards, Rundle Street, are listed in the directories for 1866 and 1867, and in January 1867 Thomas Jackson (q.v.) engaged ‘Mr Hall, the well-known photographer’, to take portraits for him. And towards the end of 1867 Hall & Freeman (q.v.) were taking portraits at Eden Valley and Tanunda. When the process of photo-lithography was attracting attention in 1867, the Register reported that Richard Hall had photographically reduced a copy of Joseph Elliott’s Bygone Days, the negative of which had then been photo-lithographed by Penman and Galbraith. Although each page of the reduced copy was less than 3 × 2 inches in size, ‘every line and point, both of the words and music, is there, in almost microscopic minuteness …’ An unusual event was reported by the Port Lincoln correspondent of the Register in July 1868. A seal had come ashore ‘for the purpose of accouchement’, and after she had given birth ‘an excellent photograph of the seal and her young was taken by Mr Hall, photographer, late of Hindley Street, Adelaide’. The seal attracted a large crowd, was tied by rope at one stage, and handled by sightseers, eventually abandoning her offspring which later died. A photographer making carte de visite portraits at Hookina in April 1871, and known only as ‘Mr Hall’ (q.v.), may have been Richard Hall. The directories list Richard Hall, of Port Lincoln, as photographer for 1871–72; innkeeper for 1873; publican at the Northern Hotel 1874–76; then Pier Hotel 1877–79. It was about 1879, and possibly near the time of his departure for Adelaide, that Richard Hall made a panoramic photograph of Port Lincoln (Noye collection) – four whole-plate prints assembled to make a 30 × 5 inch view of the township and its harbour, a steamship at the jetty and Boston Island in the distance. Richard Hall died on 29 September 1881, aged 35 years, while landlord of the Southern Cross Hotel, Adelaide.1 1Jill Statton (ed.) (1986), Biographical Index of South Australians, 1836–1885, South Australian Genealogy and Heraldry Society, p.648. Text taken from:Noye, R.J. (2007) Dictionary of South Australian Photography 1845-1915, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. CD-ROM, p.145. Writers: Staff Writer Nerina_Dunt Date written: 1992 Last updated: 2013
Born
b. 28 December 1845
Summary
Richard Hall was the eldest son of photographer ‘Professor’ Robert Hall and Ruth, nee Smith. He won prizes for the best stereoscopic photographs at the ninth exhibition of the South Australian Society of Arts in 1865, when apparently employed in his father's Adelaide studio. After his father’s death, Hall was in partnership with E.F. Edwards, initially based in Rundle Street, 1867-68, and later at Port Lincoln, 1871-72.
Gender
Male
Died
29 November 1881
Age at death
36