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Ross Homestead
Ross Homestead
Ross Homestead

Ross Homestead

Photographer
Dateca. 1905
Mediumgelatin silver print
Dimensions6 × 8 in. (15.2 × 20.3 cm)
ClassificationsPhotography
Credit LineAlbuquerque Museum, gift of Walter C. Haussamen
Object numberPA1990.013.213.B
DescriptionA homestead with a small home composed of adobe bricks and wooden siding sitting in a grassy lawn surrounded by cottonwood trees in Albuquerque, New Mexico. There is a shed structure to the left with a two-wheel wagon parked outside it. Four children sit on rocks in the sun holding instruments; a violin, harp, and guitar. They look at the camera. From left to right sit the Cobb children, Susan, Wilfred, Daphne, and Edmund.

These were the children of Eddie Ross Cobb and William Cobb who owned a local photography studio spanning the turn of the nineteenth century on Gold Avenue in downtown Albuquerque, New Mexico. Edmund G. and Fannie Lathrop Ross built this homestead south of Albuquerque, east of the AT&SF tie plant. The Ross homestead was later owned by the Cobb family and was destroyed by fire. The tamarisk hedge to right and cottonwood trees were planted by Governor Ross.
On View
Not on view
Terms
    Ross Homestead
    Cobb Studio
    ca. 1905
    Fannie Ross at her Homestead
    W. Calvin Brown
    ca. 1886
    Fannie Ross at her Homestead
    W. Calvin Brown
    ca. 1886
    Cobb Family Children
    Cobb Studio
    ca. 1906
    Cobb Family Children
    Cobb Studio
    ca. 1906
    San Jose School
    Cobb Studio
    ca. 1900