Josiah Rowe

Josiah Rowe (1809 – 1874) moved to India sometime before 1839 and began making daguerreotypes in the 1840s. Josiah Rowe was hailed as 'the father of photography in India' by Dr F. J. Mouat, a British surgeon, chemist and the first president of the Bengal Photographic Society. Apart from journal entries, there is no evidence … Continue reading Josiah Rowe

F.W. Baker

F.W. Baker (active 1850s–1875s), moved to Kolkata, then Calcutta, India as an employee of Appleton and Co. He became an assistant to James William Newland in 1855 and was managing his daguerreotype studio till 1857. On his return from a photographic tour of the North West Provinces, he established a studio and advertised it as … Continue reading F.W. Baker