In pictures: A journey through 19th Century Brazil
In 1893, British industrialist Sir Benjamin Stone travelled to Brazil to observe a full solar eclipse.
A keen traveller of considerable personal wealth, Sir
Benjamin joined a Royal Astronomical Society expedition to the Amazon
river.As well as taking photos of the eclipse, he also took a series of photographs of his journey by boat to Brazil and of the people and places he encountered.
Sir Benjamin travelled to Brazil on board the Royal Mail Ship SS Trent from Southampton. During the crossing, he photographed his fellow passengers, many of whom were poor emigrants from rural areas of Portugal in search of a better life in Brazil.
Upon his arrival in Brazil, Sir Benjamin joined the Royal Astronomical Society expedition and travelled with them to Paracuru, where they were to observe the total eclipse.
His photographs show the country on the eve of industrialisation and offer a rare glimpse of the country's north-east at the end of the 19th Century.
He secured more than 250 negatives which he had shipped back to England. His assistant made and mounted platinum prints to which Sir Benjamin added captions.
He also had a particular interest in photographing key buildings and landmarks that the expedition came across during their travels.
Their aim was to photograph the corona, an aura of plasma surrounding the Sun which is most easily seen during a total solar eclipse.
In June 1903, a report illustrated with drawings made from Sir Benjamin's photographs was published in the English newspaper The Graphic.
In it, expedition leader A J Taylor wrote that "the photographs obtained in Brazil are very satisfactory and will doubtless yield a harvest of scientific information".
As had become his habit, Sir Benjamin again chronicled life on board the ship and, as in this picture, the pastimes its passengers indulged in.
Upon his return to Britain, Sir Benjamin continued to take photographs and in 1897 founded the National Photographic Record Association, of which he became president.
His love of photography earned him the nicknames of "the knight of the camera" and "Sir Snapshot".
The photos from his Brazilian expedition are in the Stone archive at the Library of Birmingham.
They remain unpublished but a collection of 50 of them can be seen until 7 November 2014 at the Embassy of Brazil in London in an exhibition curated by Rodrigo Orrantia and Pete James.
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