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Henry Dixon 
St. Mary Overy's Dock, Southwark 
1881 (?) 
  
Carbon print 
22.7 x 18 cm 
  
National Gallery of Canada / Musée des beaux-arts du Canada 
No. 21561 
  
 
LL/63329 
  
Curatorial description (accessed 7 December 2015)
Henry Dixon began his working life as an apprentice to his elder brother, Thomas, a copperplate printer. He took up photography as a profession before 1860, and operated his own studio until 1886, when his son Thomas James joined him. Dixon, along with Alfred and John Bool, made and printed photographs for a project commissioned by the Society for Photographing Relics of Old London. Until the mid-twentieth century, Southwark was filled with wharves and warehouses, a place that had been home to trades associated with ship building and noxious industries such as glass-making, leather tanning, and hat manufacturing that were banned from the City of London. But the borough also housed religious institutions such as the Bishop of Winchester's palace and the church of St. Mary Overy (now Southwark Cathedral). 
 

 
  
 
  
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