Lafayette Ltd.
Irish, 1880 - 1952
In the 1890s Lafayette established studios in Glasgow (1890), Manchester (1892) and London (1897) and Belfast (1900). The company flourished and many of the firm's photographs were published in newspapers and magazines such as the 'Illustrated London News', 'The Gentlewoman', 'Country Life' and the 'Scots Pictorial'. From 1914 to 1927, the company even had a special office in Fleet Street to deal with press work.
James Lafayette died in Bruges in 1923. The company suffered during the 1930s but continued to function until 1952. The business was finally wound up in 1962 (Lafayette Photography 200?, pp.1-3).
Sources: Lafayette Photography (200?), 'Lafayette Photography - History' [Internet]. Dublin: Lafayette Photography. Available from:
http://www.lafayette.ie/html/history.htm [Accessed 21 January 2004
"Lafayette." Royal Commenwealth Society Photographers Index. Retrieved July 16, 2019 from http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/rcs_photographers/entry.php?id=287. NC
James Lafayette was the pseudonym of James Stack Lauder (1853-1923).[1] He was a late Victorian and Edwardian portrait photographer, and managing director from 1898 to 1923 of a company in Dublin specializing in society photographs, Lafayette Ltd.[1] In 1887, he became the first Irish photographer to be granted a royal warrant.[2]
"James Lafayette." Wikipedia. Retrieved July 16, 2019 from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Lafayette. NC
Person TypeInstitution
Last Updated8/7/24
New York, 1890 - 1916, Douaumont, France
Chicago, 1887 - 1917, Somme, France
Exmouth, Devon, 1867 - 1928, London
New York, 1862 - 1933, Poughkeepsie, New York
Dorchester, 1808 - 1896, Marietta
Mansfield, Ohio, 1858 - 1944, Beverly, Massachusetts