Photography has been around longer than most people realise and by the time the Hitchin and Letchworth camera clubs organised their photography walk in 1922, the medium was well over seventy years old. Gone were the days of requiring minutes long exposures with wet plates that required you to bring a portable dark room with you, small compact cameras and the introduction of roll film had made photography something ordinary people could enjoy. From there camera clubs were formed for hobbyists and enthusiasts and by this point existed even well-established magazines like Amateur Photographer, which is still available to this day.
So, when the Chairman of the current Hitchin Camera Club (which formed in the 1970s) saw the article from the May 24th 1922 edition of the magazine advertising the aforementioned photo walk, it made perfect sense to hold it again on its centenary. Thankfully the article provided the original route map so we were able to re-create the loop as best we could, taking into consideration a century of road changes. The illustrations on the article show off large format cameras, and whilst many people on this latest walk were using modern digital cameras, there was a good showing of film shooters. Which camera did I use? Well of course I used my (almost) period No.1 Pocket Kodak camera which would have been in line with what some may have used on the day all those years ago. Furthermore, I wasn’t even the only one to use a Pocket Kodak camera on the day either.
The day went well with good numbers of people turning out (including some non-members) and I just about managed to make it round the six mile or so route in time for a couple of biscuits at the end before it was all packed away. Shooting one of the oldest cameras on a tripod meant that I finished dead last but, as tiring as it was, I certainly enjoyed the challenge of carefully shooting my three rolls of Ilford Pan F+ 50 in a single day. I hope you enjoy the rest of the images and perhaps in another hundred years there will be a bicentennial walk. Fingers crossed there’s at least one person who brings a film camera.
You can see the original article from Amateur Photographer here on the Hitchin Camera Club website: https://www.hitchincameraclub.org/2022/05/09/centenary-event/. Thanks as well go to the Hitchin Historical Society who provided landmark information for our modern route map.
If you live locally and are thinking about joining the club, then come down to Hitchin Town Square on the 27th August or alternatively get in touch with the committee via the contact links on the website.
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