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        <name>End Date</name>
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            <text>1867</text>
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            <text>Q24058704</text>
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            <text>Involved in which fields of scholarship? (e.g. geology, philosophy and medicine)&#13;
Photography&#13;
Most famous contribution(s) to scholarship 1 (i.e. in photography):  &#13;
Helped Hill and Adamson: only with her help, they could create so many photographs&#13;
Images of completion of Ballochmyle railway viaduct in Ayrshire: completed after death of Adamson -&gt; by Mann?&#13;
Most famous contribution(s) to scholarship 2:&#13;
N/A &#13;
If you want to read one thing written by him/her, it should be: X&#13;
N/A&#13;
Any political involvement?&#13;
N/A&#13;
Any religious involvement?&#13;
Supporter of Free Church -&gt; Disruption&#13;
Other societies/groups in St Andrews?&#13;
No &#13;
Other societies/groups elsewhere?&#13;
N/A&#13;
Associated places in St Andrews: (e.g. home, lab, favourite spot)&#13;
House of Adamson, places associated with Brewster (United College etc.)&#13;
Possible human interest story 1:&#13;
Hill and Adamson are regarded as pioneers of early photography, but their creation of thousands of calotypes would not have been possible without the help of Jessie Mann&#13;
Possible human interest story 2:&#13;
Helped Hill and Adamson to realise photographs of people present at Great Disruption of the Church of Scotland in Edinburgh -&gt; Hill created painting with 3 Mann sisters: one of them may be Jessie! -&gt; 3 Mann sisters present at Disruption&#13;
Possible human interest story 3:&#13;
A letter from the painter James Naysmith to Hill, written in 1845, asks about the health of Miss Mann, “that most skillful and zealous of assistants”.&#13;
In March 1847 Nasmyth asks, “How goes on the divine solar art? And how does that worthy artist Mr Adamson the authentic contriver &amp; manipulator of light and darkness? And thrice worthy Miss Mann the most skilful and zealous of assistants.”&#13;
Possible human interest story 4:&#13;
Probably only one full-length picture of her -&gt; recently discovered in photographic collections of the University of Glasgow; no official images!&#13;
Possible human interest story 5:&#13;
Probably, Jessie Mann stained her hand with silver nitrate (black stains: therefore, photography called “black art”), which was essential for photographic processes at the time -&gt; portrait with gloved right hand!&#13;
Possible human interest story 6:&#13;
Quote by famous art historian Simpson: "She probably did a lot of printing and processing. She was obviously quite sophisticated and educated - she was definitely an associate, not a servant.&#13;
Possible human interest story 7:&#13;
Adamson's death: studio closed -&gt; school housekeeper for Andrew Balfour (private grammar school in Musselburgh)&#13;
Possible human interest story 8:&#13;
1844: king of Saxony visited Hill and Adamson, but they were not at home: Thus, Mann took a picture of him with his party =&gt; probably the first photograph taken by a woman in the world!&#13;
	Must have been sophisticated and educated, as she knew how to handle a camera&#13;
Possible human interest story 9:&#13;
Grew up as near neighbour of Hill in Perth&#13;
Possible human interest story 10:&#13;
Close relationship in studio: letter -&gt; Scottish photography: The First 30 Years, p.98&#13;
Connected to other people in St Andrews or elsewhere?:&#13;
Sir David Brewster&#13;
Dr John Adamson &#13;
Robert Adamson&#13;
Hugh Lyons Fairplay&#13;
Thomas Rodger&#13;
James David Forbes&#13;
Etc.&#13;
Awards/Honours:&#13;
No -&gt; long forgotten&#13;
Numbers:&#13;
N/A&#13;
Other interesting/quirky facts (not necessarily related to subject areas):&#13;
N/A</text>
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            <text>Any eye-witness testimony/stories:&#13;
N/A&#13;
Biographical sources: (e.g. OxDNB, family memoir, other...)&#13;
https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/13028501.scottish-woman-who-was-a-camera-pioneer/&#13;
https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/14431735.is-this-the-mysterious-scottish-#woman-who-helped-pioneer-photography/&#13;
http://www.secretscotland.org.uk/index.php/Secrets/JessieMann&#13;
Roddy Simpson: The Photography of Victorian Scotland, chapter “David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson”&#13;
John Hannavy, ed.: “Encyclopedia of nineteenth-century photography” (entry on Mann by Simpson)&#13;
https://roseteanbyphotography.co.uk/early-women-photographers/scottish-women-photographers/jessie-mann-1805-1867/#_edn6 &#13;
Stevenson and Morrison-Low, Scottish photography: The First 30 Years, p.98&#13;
Available images of the person:&#13;
Hill: disruption painting&#13;
Wikipedia&#13;
https://roseteanbyphotography.co.uk/early-women-photographers/scottish-women-photographers/jessie-mann-1805-1867/#_edn6 &#13;
Available images of places/objects associated with the person:&#13;
N/A</text>
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        <name>Biographical Text</name>
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            <text>Family origins:&#13;
From Perth&#13;
Father: Alexander Mann, housepainter&#13;
Mother: Sarah Laidley&#13;
4 sisters (Elizabeth, Margaret,?), 1 brother (Alexander)&#13;
Education:&#13;
N/A&#13;
Profession:&#13;
Photographer &#13;
Studio assistant of Hill and Adamson&#13;
Talents etc.:&#13;
Photography&#13;
Private life/family life:&#13;
Never married&#13;
Lived with unmarried sisters and for some time with unmarried brother (until he married)&#13;
(Professional) Role in St Andrews:&#13;
Associated with St Andrews via Adamson&#13;
Years in St Andrews:&#13;
Actually worked in Edinburgh, Rock House</text>
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          <name>Title</name>
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              <text>Jessie Mann</text>
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              <text>Janet Mann</text>
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          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
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              <text>Name:&#13;
Janet “Jessie” Mann&#13;
D.O.B:&#13;
1805&#13;
D.O.D:&#13;
1867&#13;
studio assistant of Hill and Adamson</text>
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              <text>1805</text>
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              <text>fal2@st-andrews.ac.uk</text>
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              <text>Photography</text>
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              <text>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jessie_Mann</text>
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