THE M&H POPULAR DETECTIVE CAMERA
Miller & Company, 442 & 444 Fulton
Street, Brooklyn, New York 1890
Box-style 4x5
detective camera marketed by Miller
& Company of Brooklyn, New York.
Miller &
Company, formerly Miller & Hopkins, was a photographic supply house. At least two advertisements have been seen
for the company in E. & H.T. Anthony & Company's The International Annual of Anthony's Photographic Bulletin, Volume
III, 1890, and in Scovill's The American Annual of Photography and Photographic Times Almanac for
1890 seen below:
From Scovill's The American Annual of Photography and
Photographic Times Almanac for 1890
The M&H Popular Detective Camera appears
in a
16-page catalogue from Miller & Company titled Photographic Specialties and copyrighted 1890:
From Miller & Company's Photographic
Specialties, copyright 1890
From Miller & Company's
Photographic Specialties, copyright 1890
The catalogue confirms
that Miller & Company private-branded at least some of their apparatus and
supplies, as reflected in their "M&H
Compactum Shutter" which was actually Hopkins' Pneumo Shutter:
From Miller & Company's
Photographic Specialties, copyright 1890
Ad from Scovill's
The American Annual of Photography and Photographic Times Almanac for 1891
However,
assuming the engraving to be accurate, this M&H Popular Detective Camera resembles nothing seen from any other
maker so far. Despite this and with Miller & Company having been a
distributor for the most part, it's highly unlikely they would have built the
camera. An internet search revealed no examples,
photographs or advertisements for the camera, which is not listed in McKeown's Price Guide to Antique and
Classic Cameras 12th Edition 2005-2006, or seen in any other camera collecting
reference book that I'm aware of.
Pending more information,
the camera's 1890 production date is based solely on the Miller catalogue's
copyright. And in reality, production
may have preceded or succeeded this date. But with no trade journal references or
advertisements found to help narrow its timeline, this all tends to suggest that
the M&H Popular Detective Camera was very short-lived.
Like many
obscure cameras that were briefly offered by smaller companies during the early
1890's, the M&H Popular Detective
Camera will no doubt prove elusive
for anyone trying to find one.
For more
information on two other cameras sold by Miller & Company, look for "The $5.00 Detective Camera" and
the "M&H Nonapreil Camera"
under the "Antique Cameras"
section of this website.