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The Rural Voice, 2005-04, Page 43The photos of Reuben R. Sallows can now be viewed online including Man Sowing Wheat, 1911, (above left), and Petting Horse in Field, 1904, (right). There are 900 photos from six different collections that can be accessed at sallowsgallery.ca giving a marvellous peek into what life was like in the late 1800s and early 1900s on Ontario's farms. Photographer. Over the next six years Sallows kept taking outdoor photos. In 1903 a Philadelphia company asked for a collection of his photos and accepted 10 of the 12 sent, paying him $50. "Five dollars for each accepted print!" the amazed Sallows wrote later. "Sixty dollars a dozen. For the same work at home my regular customers were paying me $6 a dozen. This was the first money I had ever received for any commercial work and it certainly 'woke' me up. I concluded that if the picture -loving public valued my work so highly that they were willing to pay me $60 per dozen, I would be foolish to confine myself to portrait work alone." Soon he was being called "Canada's photographic genius" and his work was being published all over North America and in Britain. The emergence of picture magazines saw as many as a dozen of his photos of domestic scenes, pictures of rural life and nature scenes published in one issue. He did work for Canadian Pacific Railway, Grand Trunk Railway, the Ontario Department of Agriculture and the federal Immigration Department which paid him to travel widely throughout Ontario, Quebec and the prairie provinces to take promotional pictures. During three trips to western Canada he took some of the first recorded photographs of the Doukhobors, immigrants from Russia who had settled in the west and who were reluctant to have their photos taken. Closer to home, he took his camera out into the fields and farmyards of the surrounding countryside capturing images of people carrying out the full range of their activities: seeding, picking apples. cutting wood, harvesting and building barns and fences. Sallows described his style in a passage quoted in Colborne Township's history book Colborne Connections: "I always strive to take people unawares, in their natural moods, at their common callings, or in familiar surroundings — all of which I find imparts natural and lifelike qualities to all my studies." There are those who might carp that Sallows' photos weren't truly lifelike because their subjects often seemed to be dressed in their best clothes, even when doing farm or household chores, but the photos still provide a glimpse of life in that period better than anything else available. With his large -format camera, the photos have a quality of detail just not available with smaller cameras. even today's excellent 35 mm or digital cameras. He was also expert in choosing lighting conditions that seem to make many of the photos three-dimensional. Marian Doucette, information service co-ordinator for the Huron County Library, who headed the project to create the digital gallery, calls it one of her proudest achievements. The project began when the library received grants from the Ontario Ministry of Culture's Libtary and Strategic Development Fund's Digital Alliance Program and the Department of Canadian Heritage. Doucette worked with Robin Wark of the Sallows Gallery to begin the process with the 200 images in the Sallows collection. Technician Peter Marvel set about scanning the images while library staff he_7:an cataloguing. Once the Sallows Gallery collection was recorded. the collection of the Huron County Historical Society and the archives of the Huron County Museum were scanned. doubling the images available for the gallery. Next it was the University of Guelph's collection of all the photos at the former Ontario Agriculture Museum at Milton and other smaller APRIL 2005 39