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The word "photography" comes from the Greek words for light and writing. Johann Von Maedler, a Berlin astronomer, first used the word in 1839.

The first camera was called the Camera Obscura, which means dark chamber. In a dark room, a small hole in the wall allowed an outside image to be projected into the room, upside down. Eventually, smaller sized cameras were developed and mirrors were added to display the image correctly.

Autochrome was the first process used to create color photographs. It was developed in 1903 by the Lumiere brothers and was in continuous use until the 1930's when it was replaced by color film.

1725-27 Johann Heinrich Schulze discovers and experiments with the darkening action of light on mixtures of chalk and silver nitrate.
1777 Carl Wilhelm Scheele proves ammonia stabilizes darkened silver salts.
1786 Gilles-Louis Chrétien develops the Physionotrace for profile portraits.
1794 Robert Barker opens the first Panorama, prototype of future movie houses.
1802 Thomas Wedgwood, following the experiments of Schulze and Scheele, produces silhouettes by use of silver nitrate but is unable to fix the images.
1806 William Hyde Wollaston invents the camera lucida.
1816 Joseph Nicéphore Niépce's attempts at photography he called heliography (sundrawing) records a view from his workroom window on paper sensitized with silver chloride, but he is only partially able to fix the image.
1816-26 Niépce achieves his first photographic image with a camera obscura.
1819 Sir John Herschel discovers the photographic fixative, hyposulfite of soda.
1822 Niépce succeeds in obtaining a photographic copy of an engraving superimposed on glass.
1822 Niépce, using a camera, makes a view from his workroom window on a pewter plate.
1827 Charles Wheatstone describes a moving shutter.
1829 Niépce and Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre form a 10-year partnership to develop photography.
1829 Wheatstone invents a non-photographic stereoscopic viewing device.
1833 William Henry Fox Talbot begins experimenting with photogenic drawings.
1835 Talbot photographs window at Lacock Abbey.
1837 Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre  creates his first daguerreotype.
1839 The daguerreotype is publicly announced at the Academy of Sciences in Paris.
1839 Giroux Daguerreotype camera is introduced; first commercially-manufactured camera.
1839 The Petzval lens is introduced.
1841 William Henry Talbot patents the Calotype process.
1843 Anna Atkins produced the first photographically illustrated album entitled: British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions.
1844 Talbot publishes Pencil of Nature.
1845 Mathew Brady begins to photograph famous persons of his time, including Daniel Webster, Edgar Allan Poe, James Fenimore Cooper.
1847 Louis Désiré Blanquard-Evard improves Talbot's Calotype process and sets up a photographic printing establishment.
1848 Claude Felix Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor uses albumen on glass plates for negatives.
1849 Maxime Du Camp travels to Egypt to photograph monuments.
1849 Stereophotography, which uses a double lens camera to produce two views that together produce a three- dimensional view, is developed.
1850 Albumen printing paper is introduced by L. D. Blanquart-Evrard.
1851 Talbot makes first instantaneous photographs using electric spark illumination.
Frederick Scott Archer publishes wet-collodion process.
1852 Talbot patents photoglyphic engraving which produces printable steel plates.
1854 George Eastman born July 12, 1854, in Marshall, NY. He grew up in the family home which was in Waterville, NY (outside of Utica, NY). The old Eastman homestead has since been moved to the Genesee Country Museum in Mumford, NY.
1854 Ambrotype, a positive collodion image, is patented in US.
1855 Ferrotype process (tintypes) is introduced to US.
1855 Henry Peach Robinson's photograph Fading Away establishes him as a chronicler of the Victorian scene with multiple negative compositions of a life near its end.
1859 Sutton panoramic camera is patented.
1860's Julia Margaret Cameron is known for her lyrical portraits of Victorian men and women.
1861 Francois Willeme opens a photosculpture studio in Paris.
Chambre Automatique de Bertsch - first sub-miniature camera.
1864 Julia Margaret Cameron begins to photograph soft and impressionistic portraits that challenge the accepted ideas of focus.
Joseph Wilson Swan perfects the carbo process.
 
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