Historic find

WINSTED — A Granby woman with roots in the Laurel City has taken on the task of sorting through thousands of old black-and-white photos from this area, discovered in a family attic, that depict Winsted and surrounding towns in the early 20th century. The find has sparked interest among historians, artists and photographers while presenting a few new mysteries.Peg Giles, granddaughter of noted Winsted merchant Frank DeMars, had already gained local attention for finding this historic mother lode of images, several of which have been blown up into large canvas prints at the Winsted Super Saver/IGA. Giles found the trove of more than 5,000 glass slides when cleaning out the home of her eldest aunt, Martha Ruth DeMars, who died in 2009.“I had always known they were in the attic, but when my aunt was alive she really didn’t want anyone to touch them,” Giles said. “She was in charge of them and they were hers. The most she did was move them from one side of the attic to the other.”Giles said before her aunt died, family members tried to identify the locations of many of the photos, but the task of identifying all of them was too great. “She was too old and she couldn’t stick with it for more than a half-hour at a time,” she said.For the past two years, Giles has been scanning the slides and chronicling them the best way she can, sometimes only naming the images for their identifying features. Many images are of recognizable areas in Winsted and surrounding towns, but a far larger number are unidentified photos Frank DeMars took in approximately 50 different towns in Connecticut and Massachusetts.Frank DeMars, born in 1872, was the proprietor of The Art Store, a framing shop that opened around 1904 at 700 Main St. The shop eventually expanded to 711-715 Main St., where he sold photographs he had taken, many of which were made into postcards. He continued taking photos after closing the store in 1914.Realizing she had found something worth sharing with the public, Giles began uploading her new digital files to a website, demarsimages.com, where anyone interested in old photographs can search by town name and by theme. But since many of the photographs have not been identified, Giles said she welcomes the input of visitors to the site who can shed more light on the subject.The photos Giles provided to The Winsted Journal for this story include a few known Winsted locations, along with several as-yet-unidentified shots, thought to be here in town or at least close by. Giles said she would be grateful to anyone who has more information about these photos.If you think you can identify one or more of these images, send an e-mail to info@demarsimages.com with a description of the photo and where you think it was taken. Readers may also contact The Winsted Journal if they have information regarding the photos and we will pass it along.

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