Vintage
Greendale Through the Lens of John
Vachon
Photos
used in the website by John Vachon,
courtesy of the Library of Congress
By
William Attewell
Using a keen eye and his camera John Vachon
documented life in the early days of the
Village of Greendale for the Farm Security
Administration. His vivid black and white
photographs provide us with an invaluable
and unique insight to everyday life in
Greendale in 1939.
It is a true treat to see Vachon’s historic
visual images of the Village of Greendale
and they are preserved by the Library of
Congress. I encourage you to see them for
yourself, simply
Click Here and
then enter “Greendale” into the search
field.
Born in 1914 in St. Paul, Michigan Vachon
originally worked as a filing clerk for the
Farm Security Administration. There Roy
Stryker, the head of the Information
Division of the Farm Security
Administration was ever evangelical about
his agency’s photographs and urged Vachon:
“When you do the filing, why don’t you look
at the pictures.”
By 1937 Vachon had looked enough to want to
make photographs himself. In October and
November 1938, Vachon traveled to Nebraska
on his first extensive solo trip. He
photographed agricultural programs on
behalf of the FSA’s regional office and
pursued an extra assignment from Stryker:
The city of Omaha.
In 1939 he traveled to Wisconsin where he
took photographs of the iconic Greendale
original homes and village life
The hallmark of his style of photography is
the portrayal of people and places
encountered on the street, unembellished by
the beautifying contrivances used by
calendar and public relations
photographers.
Following his stint at the FSA, Vachon
continued his photography career, working
for the United Nations and magazines such
as “Life” and “Look.” He died in 1975 in
New York City.
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John Vachon