Found Photo Project #9
By Eilene Lyon
Similar to the Welsh-Adler File, I recently picked up a collection of photos from the local antique mart that had belonged to a single person. I did leave behind a few unidentifiable snapshots, but bought the remainder.
Unlike the David R. Young photo that mysteriously turned up locally, I have a clear provenance for the Bass Collection. Though the people pictured—and many of the photos themselves—originated in Lamar County, Alabama, the last person to own this collection died here in Durango.
Though at first some of the images did not seem to belong in the collection, with a bit of research I tied them all to the original owner, Elvin Brant “Johnnie” Bass. All were related in some way with the exception of one of Johnnie’s classmates from the University of New Mexico, John Dietzman. His portrait went to a relative a couple weeks ago. The rest of the Bass Collection was mailed to Alabama. They will be accessioned by the Lamar County Historical Society via a Bass relative.

There will be a number of interesting stories to come out of this group of found photos, but I should begin with Johnnie.
Elvin B. Bass was born July 22, 1907 in Vernon, Lamar County, Alabama.1 His father was Edward N. Bass (1879–1952) and his mother was Ada E. Box (1889–1908). You can see that his mother, Ada, died not long after he was born. Ada and many of her close relatives died in a wave of typhoid fever in 1908 and 1909. That will be a separate tale.
Edward Bass remarried in 1910 to Emma J. Byrd.2 Emma was step-mother to little Johnnie and had no children of her own. Johnnie called her Mom, but he knew his biological mother was Ada. The collection has only one photo of Ada as a young girl, with her Box family.
Johnnie’s collection has many photos of the extended Byrd family, which included some Byrd cousins in the Brock family. That’s a lot of B surnames! Bass, Box, Brock, and Byrd. A small group of pictures are from the Pennington family (connected to the Boxes), and a few other surnames that popped up were: Collins, Engh, Enix, and McCullough.

In the early 1920s, the Edward Bass family lived in Santa Fe, New Mexico.3 By 1930, they had moved to Roswell, where Edward owned a service station.4 They spent time in Phoenix before returning to New Mexico by 1940. They settled in Albuquerque, which is where Johnnie had graduated from the university in 1928.5 The Bass family liked to vacation in La Plata County, Colorado, at a resort area called Vallecito.
Johnnie married Ruth Virginia Zendt in Phoenix, Arizona, on August 14, 1935.6 Their daughter, Dorothy Jane “Dottie” Bass, came along in January 1943.7 That was right about the time Johnnie began his WWII service, enlisting in Albuquerque on December 30, 1942.8 He was stationed at Fort Hood, Texas.9 The couple had no other children.

Johnnie’s career after college began in Roswell, where he worked as a cashier for a phone company. In 1940, in Albuquerque, he operated a service station. By 1950, he had a career in real estate.10
His daughter, Dottie Bass, married once and soon divorced, retaining her maiden name for life.11 She had a career working in the federal government at the Farmers Home Administration and in Housing and Urban Development. She retired and moved to Bayfield, La Plata County, Colorado, in 2001 and died at Mercy Hospice in Durango in 2018.12 And thus the Bass Collection undoubtedly wound up in her estate sale here.



Feature image: 1928 graduation portrait of Elvin B. “Johnnie” Bass.
- National Archives at St. Louis; St. Louis, Missouri, WWII Draft Registration Cards For New Mexico, 10/16/1940–03/31/1947, Record Group: Records of the Selective Service System, 147, Box: 10, Serial No. 1229, Elvin Brant Bass; image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/2238/images/44026_04_00002-01503 : accessed 1 Sep 2024). ↩
- “Alabama, U.S., County Marriage Records, 1805-1967,” database, Ancestry, Lamar County, 1904–1917, Edward N. Bass and Miss Emma Byrd (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/61365/images/TH-1942-34744-17809-41 : accessed 1 Sep 2024). ↩
- “Santa Feans Graduate,” The Santa Fe New Mexican, June 4, 1928, p. 2 col. 2; image, Newspapers (https://www.newspapers.com/image/583607478/ : accessed 1 Sep 2024). This indicates that Elvin Brant Bass was “of Santa Fe” when he received his bachelor’s degree in Albuquerque. He likely attended high school in Santa Fe. ↩
- 1930 US census, Chaves County, New Mexico, population schedule, Roswell District 0001, enumeration district 3-1, sheet 3-B, dwelling 78, family 90, Edward N Bass; image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/6224/images/4660946_00011 : accessed 1 Sep 2024). ↩
- 1940 US census, Bernalillo County, New Mexico, population schedule, Albuquerque, enumeration district 1-21, sheet 16A, household 358, Edward N. Bass; image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/2442/images/m-t0627-02438-00679 : accessed 1 Sep 2024). ↩
- “Zendt—Bass,” The Berwyn News (Berwyn, Illinois), August 9, 1935, p. 6, col. 2; image, Newspapers (https://www.newspapers.com/image/523575616/ : accessed 1 Sep 2024). ↩
- Obituary for Dorothy Jane “Dottie” Bass 1943–2018, The Durango Herald (Durango, Colorado), September 14, 2018; online at Legacy (https://obituaries.durangoherald.com/us/obituaries/durangoherald/name/dorothy-bass-obituary?id=8401103 : accessed 1 Sep 2024). ↩
- “U.S., World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946,” database, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/8939/ ), Elvin B. Bass. ↩
- Obituary for Dorothy Jane “Dottie” Bass. ↩
- 1930 US Census, Edward N Bass household. 1940 US census, Bernalillo County, New Mexico, population schedule, Albuquerque, enumeration district 1-19, sheet 16A, household 352, Elvin Bass; image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/2442/images/m-t0627-02438-00601 : accessed 1 Sep 2024). 1950 US census, Bernalillo County, New Mexico, population schedule, Albuquerque, enumeration district 1-20C, sheet 72, household 621, Elvin B. Bass; image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/62308/images/43290879-New_Mexico-044260-0033 : accessed 1 Sep 2024). ↩
- “Wedding Vows Read in Church,” Albuquerque Journal, March 2, 1969, p. 15, col. 6; image, Newspapers (https://www.newspapers.com/image/157098809/ : accessed 1 Sep 2024). ↩
- Obituary for Dorothy Jane “Dottie” Bass. ↩


I love how you go sleuthing around finding the stories behind the photos you find!
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Thanks , Dale. Human drama.
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Indeed!
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I wonder why he was called Johnnie! Fascinating find. How sad that there are no direct descendants.
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A name like “Elvin”?! Where’d they come up with that? The recipient of the photos is thrilled to have them.
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That’s great!
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Great work – I hope some distant relatives find your blog post. I know I’d love to find one like this. I remember seeing barrels of old photos for sale in an antique store back in Ottawa and feeling so sad.
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It does happen that relatives find these posts. The recipient is going to include these in the historical society collection and I’m sure has contact with extended family.
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You are so skilled at this work Eilene. It makes so much sense that Colorado history and ancestry is tied to eastern states given the westward movement. Do you ever go into Colorado Springs or even up to Denver to browse around antique malls for collections like this? I can only imagine what you would find. I also wonder what stories would come from finds here in WA or say CA- all those folks who chose to keep going over the Rockies with their own family history along.
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Thanks, Deb. I imagine this is a hobby I’ll be indulging in for a long time. It’s a real feel-good kind of project. I’ve picked up photos in Idaho and Indiana. My travels will undoubtedly turn up photos in many places.
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Wow, that is A LOT of research you’ve done on these photos, Eilene!
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Ancestry.com makes it pretty easy. There are more than 40 photos in the collection.
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Fascinating! Great the way you reunite photos with their families.
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There are some people who do this on a big scale. I’m trying to get an article published on this.
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I hope you do get that article published, Eilene. It is wonderful how your hobby has taken off and so many others gain from it.
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Thank you, Suzanne!
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It’s fascinating how you’re able to find out so much from a group of photographs!
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This group was easy, because the photos were labeled. Makes a big difference!
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A lucky find!
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I’m happy there was a perfect recipient for the collection.
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🙂
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What a treasure trove this buy was for you Eilene. Johnnie certainly wore many hats after graduating from college didn’t he. My favorite picture in this post is the one you described as a tiny photo of Edward N. Bass and second wife, Emma J. Byrd. It reminded me a little of a Bonnie and Clyde photo.
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I thought about putting in a photo of them when older, but changed my mind. There was one unlabeled photo in the bunch I bought, and the recipient compared it to that little photo and we decided it is a photo of Edward from about 1904, so before his first marriage.
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I liked this photo … it just had a unique vintage look to it.
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Which one was that?
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A tiny snapshot of Edward N. Bass and second wife, Emma J. Byrd.
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What a fun and fascinating side project! Your detective work never ceases to amaze me.
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It is a fun hobby and has some delightful rewards!
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I can tell!!
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Picked up a new batch of photos today!
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Woohoo! Let the fun begin!
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I’m amazed by the stories you weave from photos of people who you find along the way. You are a detective at heart, aren’t you?
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Oh yes, indeed. That was my first choice of careers, but it turns out you can’t just start out in the detective ranks.😕
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For me, it’s impossible to find the stories behind the photos… I like this blog!
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What sort of photos are you trying to research? Is it just that they aren’t labeled? Do they have photographer information?
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I look at old family pictures and I don’t know where to start 🙂
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If any have names for the faces, group them together. If you know one person, it can help you identify others likely to be with them.
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We are fortunate to get the polish to all your leg work, because my Godness . . . the research you put into these is really quite something!
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Aww, shucks. T’ain’t nothin’.🙂
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Oh it’s something.
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Thank you.
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