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Martha Ewing Newcome (1870-1959)
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Shirlie Montgomery led a life
filled with family, friends and celebrities. By 1950, she had built her
reputation as one of the premiere photographers of the Bay Area. Her business
grew and while she loved the prestige of journalism and the excitement of
wrestling, she also developed a reputation among corporations that needed
advertising images and individuals who wanted first class studio portraits. In
the late 1940s, Shirlie met with Martha Ewing Newcome to take some photographs.
Martha Ewing’s story is a lot
like Shirlie’s, only a generation earlier. At a time when women generally
stayed in the background … or stayed home to raise the family … she partnered
with George W. Harris to open a photography studio in Washington D. C. in 1905. Harris had covered
the Johnstown, Pa., flood of 1889 as a rookie news photographer. After working
at Hearst News Service in San Francisco from 1900 to 1903, he joined
Roosevelt's press entourage on a train trip. According to the papers nominating
the studio to the National Register of Historic Places, "the president
personally urged him to start a photographic news service in Washington because
it was so difficult at that time for out-of-town newspapers to get timely
photographs of notable people and events in the Nation's Capital."
The partnership of Harris and
Ewing drew on the strengths of both partners … Harris was the photographer … Ewing
was the “front man” persuading political celebrities to work with them. With
forty subscribers in that first year, Harris and Ewing soon ran the largest
photo studio in Washington and sold photos to media outlets throughout the
nation and world. Upon the death of her husband, William A. Newcome, Ewing sold
her interest to Harris in 1915. Harris ran the news service until 1945 and
stayed in the portrait business until 1955. Ewing moved to California.
In 1919, when Samuel F. B.
Morse formed Del Monte Properties Company and began transforming the
development, there were only 17 homes at Pebble Beach. A December 1921 company
report showed that other than company employees and caretakers, there were only
three year-round residents. One of those was photographer Martha Ewing Newcome.
(The other two were home building contractor Raymond Austin James and
international banker and land speculator Llewelyn Arthur Nares.) Mrs. Newcome,
as she was known in Pebble Beach, purchased two lots in 1915 above what is now
the 14th tee of Pebble Beach Golf. The home she built was known as “Sunset
Hill.”
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Two views of Sunset Hill looking from the 8th green across the 14th fairway. Top in the early-1930s (Courtesy PBC Lagorio Archive). Bottom, the same view in 2013 (Courtesy Wikipedia). |
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Shirlie first met Martha
Newcome through mutual connections in the South Bay. Shirlie did some
photography for Newcome at her home in Pebble Beach. They hit it off well and
developed a friendship well beyond that of photographer and client. They shared many good times ... dinners, picnics, fun in "The City" and even golf.
Shirlie had been a fairly
good athlete in her school days, playing on her high school basketball team.
She preferred the grace and beauty of dance, however, and avidly pursued dance
classes and a variety of roles in dance and theater as a youngster. In fact,
she took dance classes with the famed sisters Olivia Dehaviland and Joan
Fontaine, who were raised in the West Valley town of Saratoga. Martha Ewing
Newcome introduced Shirlie to golf. While she enjoyed it, she said that the
only rounds she ever played were with her friend on “that course down in Pebble
Beach” … i.e., Pebble Beach Golf Links. Not a bad place to be introduced to the
game!
I have gathered together here
some of the letters sent to Shirlie by Mrs. Newcome, as well as some of the photos
Shirlie took of her at “Sunset Hill.”
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The above photos were all taken by Shirlie at Sunset Hill. |
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February 1951 postcard from Ewing Newcome inviting Shirlie to spend the weekend in Del Monte as she has "an empty guest room" and they could share a "simple little dinner fare". |
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January 1951 letter from Ewing Newcome talking about shirts! Apparently Shirlie was pretty handy at seamstress work and Martha needed some shirts altered! |
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Love this letter dated July 1951 with multiple messages! It is written on "old H&E paper now obsolete," in multiple colors. It shows the casual, friendly relationship these two independent women had together. |
Images not otherwise credited, are taken from documents in the Bob and Susan
Bortfeld, Shirlie Montgomery Collection at History San Jose. Used with
permission.
The following is the
extensive obituary for Mrs. Martha Ewing Newcome published in the Monterey Peninsula Herald, Oct. 24,
1959
Mrs. Martha Newcome, Long Time Resident, Dies
Mrs.
Martha Ewing Newcome of Pebble Beach died last night at a local hospital after
a short illness. She would have been 90 years old next May 18. Mrs. Newcome
lived quietly for many years at “Sunset Hill” her Pebble Beach home with its
breathtaking view of ocean, mountains and curving shoreline.
Even
some of her friends did not know that for over half of her exciting and active
life she was the partner of George Harris of Washington, D.C. in the firm of
Harris and Ewing, one of the most famous photographic news service
organizations in the world.
Born
Martha Kuntze in Yankton, S.D., she often used to say she had traveled far to
the day when she was arranging photographic sittings for presidents, kings,
Supreme Court justices and most of the great people of the world from
“Roosevelt to Roosevelt.”
Built
“Sunset Hill.”
At
the suggestion of a dear and long-time friend, Samuel G. Blythe, one of the
great newspapermen of all time, Mrs. Newcome searched out the Del Monte Forest
area with the late Charles Olmstead, a representative of Del Monte Properties
Co. Blythe had said the requirement was a place where the ocean, the forest and
the mountains met. “A large order,” he once wrote. Mrs. Newcome found the spot,
cabled the single word “Eureka” to Blythe who was then in China representing
his newspaper, the New York World.
She
built “Sunset Hill” in 1916. It was one of the first houses on the hillside
overlooking Pebble Beach golf course. Over the years the visitor’s book has
become a “Who’s Who” of the world’s great statesmen, musicians, artists,
writers and many who were just plain friends of which Mrs. Newcome had many.
The latchstring at “Sunset Hill” was always out. And many who pulled it were
neither important nor famous.
Opened
Studio in 1905.
Mrs.
Newcome came to California as a young girl and first settled in Stockton where
her father had a brick factory. They later moved to San Jose where she first
met George Harris. The two opened a branch of the Bushnell photo studio, as
managers. It was in 1905, after Harris had become personally acquainted with
President Theodore Roosevelt while traveling with him as a free-lance
photographer, that he and Mrs. Newcome established the Harris and Ewing studio
at Washington. For the next half-century the firm continued photographing men
and women who ran the nation and the world … presidents, kings, queens, prime
ministers, ambassadors. Mrs. Ewing was the “front man” as she often described
it and Harris took the pictures. Her job was by the far the most exciting of
the two at times, since many famous persons were photographed only after
considerable diplomatic maneuvering, strategy and cloak and dagger tactics.
In
Rome.
As
a young woman Mrs. Newcome spent some time in Rome, Italy, where her husband
was connected with the American embassy. It was in Washington that she met
Blythe, who became a lifelong friend. He once wrote of Mrs. Newcome that she
was “the dearest, most loyal, most understanding, most courageous, and most
intelligent friend any man ever had.” For some years before the firm of Harris
and Ewing was sold, Harris managed it alone. He remained a close friend
however, and spent some weeks on the Monterey Peninsula every year – including
a visit in August of this year.
Services
Monday.
Mrs.
Newcome was hospitalized only a short time. Death resulted from cancer. Mrs.
Newcome leaves three nieces, Ella de Leon of Los Angeles, Viola Raczkowski of
Hawaii, and Iva Kingsbury of San Jose; two nephews, Carl Kuntze of Stockton and
Paul Hammond of San Francisco, and a grandnephew, Wayne Kingsbury of San Jose.
Funeral services will be held at the Little Chapel-by-the-Sea in Pacific Grove
Monday at 11 a.m. The Rev. David Hill of All Saints’ Episcopal Church of Carmel
will officiate. Paul Mortuary is in charge of arrangements.