Economy
In reply to the discussion: Weekend Economists' Harvest Ball September 21-23, 2012 [View all]DemReadingDU
(16,000 posts)9/21/12 'Lunch Atop A Skyscraper,' Famous New York City Photograph, Turns 80
?12
One of New York City's most famous photographs turned 80 Thursday. "Lunch Atop A Skyscraper," showing 11 workers eating lunch while sitting on a steel beam 800 feet above Rockefeller Center, was taken on September 20, 1932.
The image, taken at what is now the GE Building, struck a chord with Americans during the Great Depression. Ken Johnston, director of historical photography at Corbis Images-- the company who owns the photograph-- talked to The Wall Street Journal:
This is the first two years of the Great Depression, says Mr. Johnston. Usually when you saw lines of men, at that time, theyd be in a bread line, at a soup kitchen, not working and eating lunch, he says. Here, in the new and exciting age of skyscrapers, the photo displayed the worker in America in the 30s, keeping going and building.
Although Johnston confirms the photograph was likely a staged publicity stunt, he has no doubts the men weren't as fearless as they look. "Those guys are too strong of characters to be fakes," he told DNAinfo. "They do work up there. There's a great tradition of photographing construction workers up on the beams."
Much is still unknown about the photograph. Although Charles Ebbets is often credited as the photographer for the image, it's tough to verify. Additionally, the identities of nine of the men are still unknown. Two men were identified, according to The Journal, during research for "Men At Lunch," a documentary about the photograph which was recently screened at the Toronto Film Festival.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/21/lunch-atop-a-skyscraper-famous-new-york-photograph-turns-80-rockefeller-center_n_1904602.html?
Documentary trailer: Men at Lunch
appx 2.5 minutes
Spouse worked 30 years as a union Ironworker, climbing columns and walking those high beams, although in Dayton, Ohio, the buildings were not near as tall as those in New York. He followed in the footsteps of his father, and his grandfather and uncles.