Hear the September 29, 2008, BBC/PRI The World broadcast about this book at http://www.theworld.org/?q=node/21321.
![]()
The Galveston That Was
by Howard Barnstone
Photographs by Henri Cartier-Bresson and Ezra Stoller
Foreword by James Johnson Sweeney
Afterword by Peter H. Brink
In a 1963 novel, Edna Ferber compared the city of Galveston to Miss Havisham, the gray, mournful abandoned bride of Dickens' Great Expectations. A thriving port city in the nineteenth century, Galveston suffered catastrophe in the twentieth as a deadly hurricane and shifting economics dropped a pall over its waterfront and Victorian mansions.Originally conceived as a requiem for the faded city, The Galveston That Was (developed by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and funded by Jean and Dominique de Menil) instead helped resurrect the city. Architect-author Howard Barnstone, renowned portrait photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, and architect-photographer Ezra Stoller captured the soul of the city in The Galveston That Was and, as a result, inspired a major and successful effort to restore Galveston's historic architectural treasures. Many of the buildings pictured in the book have since been restored, and the pace of demolition slowed dramatically after the book's initial publication.
In 1994, Rice University Press, in collaboration with the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and George and Cynthia Mitchell, published an updated edition of the book. This new printing of the book, now under the Texas A&M University Press imprint, contains the text annotations and updates, plus Peter H. Brink's afterword, which were added to the 1994 edition.
"This poignant and vivid record of the great mansions and public buildings of the historic island city by the late Houston architect is credited as being a catalyst in the preservation and restoration movement in Galveston."—Houston Chronicle
"The Galveston That Was probes the present on the same level as the past. It disquiets and unsettles us, asking us to establish ourselves, wherever we are, by building what we care about and caring about what we build."—Bloomsbury Review
Number Five: Sara and John Lindsey Series in the Arts and Humanities
The Galveston That Was
ISBN 0-89096-887-X cloth $49.95
LC 93-44052. 8 1/2x11. 248 pp. 107 duotone photos.
17 line drawings. Bib. Index.
Architecture. Photography. Texana.Publication Date: April 1999.
![]()
Terms of order and other ways to order