Aultman Behind The Camera
Aultman atras de la camara

Aultman Behind The Camera

By 1911 El Paso was a gathering place for many of the main personalities of the Mexican Revolution (Francisco Madero, Francisco (Pancho) Villa, Pascual Orozco) and after the shooting began, many American newsmen also flocked to El Paso to cover the event. Aultman was a man in the right place at the right time. He photographed the battle of Casas Grandes, the first battle of Juárez in May 1911, and the Orozco rebellion in 1912. He was a favorite of Pancho Villa, who called Aultman "Banty Rooster" because he was only 5'4" tall. Aultman worked for the International News Service and Pathé News and experimented with cinematography. In 1916 he was one of the first photographers to arrive at Columbus, New Mexico, after the famous raid on that town by the Villistas. Aultman died from a fall in his studio in 1943. Subsequently, the El Paso Chamber of Commerce purchased his negatives from the estate. Over the next twenty years the negatives were moved from one storage place to another, and undoubtedly some disappeared. In the 1960s, due largely to the interest of historian C. L. Sonnichsen, the remaining 6,000 negatives were purchased, prints were made, and both negatives and prints were placed in the El Paso Public Library. A second set of prints is in the Library of the University of Texas at El Paso. Aultman's photographs are a priceless contribution to the recorded history of El Paso, southern New Mexico, and Ciudad Juárez. Equally important are his photos of the early stages of the Mexican revolution.

Area: Central / Downtown

Collection: Aultman Scrapbook

Source: El Paso County Historical Society

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Cleopatra Perfumes

Cleopatra Perfumes on 801 S Stanton Street in downtown El Paso.

Mata's Fruit Store

Seventh and Stanton

Bridge to Juarez Mexico

Cars driving over the bridge into Juarez, Mexico.

Mata's Fruit Store

Seventh and Stanton

Pay phone

Seventh and Stanton

Shops and Businesses

Shops and Businesses on 900 S Stanton Street in downtown El ...

Parked Bicycle with Shops in Background.

A parked bicycle with shops and businesses in the background on ...

Shops and Businesses Downtown

Shops and businesses in the background on 900 S Stanton Street ...

O' Reilly Auto Parts and other businesses

O' Reilly Auto Parts and other shops and businesses on 711 S ...

Clothing Shop

Clothing Shop on the corner of 700 S Stanton and E Father Rahm ...

Pay telephone

Pay telephone on building in downtown El Paso.

Alley in downtown

Alley in downtown El Paso with dumpsters and vehicles.

Chihuahua Sound

Chihuahua Sound on 316 E Father Rahm Avenue in downtown El Paso.

Commuter bus station

Commuter bus station in downtown El Paso that provides ...

Sagrado Corazon mural (Courtesy Alonzo Gaytán)

Sagrado Corazon mural painted by Francisco Delgado, the mural is ...

Sacred Heart Church

The Rev. Carlos M. Pinto, S.J., a native Italian, arrived in El ...

Street scene

A street scene in Downtown El Paso. The picture was taken in ...

El Paso Street Downtown

South El Paso Street, a center of commerce for residents of El ...

Street scene

A street scene in Downtown El Paso, close to the border. The ...

Downtown neighborhood

Downtown El Paso neighborhood.

Street scene

A street scene in Downtown El Paso. The picture was taken in ...

Street scene

A street scene in Downtown El Paso. The picture was taken in ...

home.search_collection