Loose personal and family prints and negatives
- Date:
- 1939-c.1999
- Reference:
- UGC 198/10/2
- Part of:
- Papers of Guido Pellegrino Arrigo Pontecorvo, geneticist, Professor of Genetics, University of Glasgow, Scotland
- Archives and manuscripts
Collection contents
About this work
Description
Most photographs have captions on reverse.
Wellcome Collection does not hold a digitised copy of all items in this series. Negatives within this series have not been digitised. Items from UGC 198/10/2 can be viewed in the searchroom at Archive Services, University of Glasgow. Please visit the Glasgow University Archive Services website or see the complete catalogue for full details.
Publication/Creation
1939-c.1999
Physical description
56 photographs, 1 bundle of negative strips, 1 album of negative strips and 1 box of approx 437 slides
Arrangement
Arranged into bundles of related photographs in rough chronological order. Where possible duplicates were removed.
Biographical note
A mixture of personal photographic prints and negatives taken by Pontecorvo (and others) which capture family celebrations and holidays, childhood photographs (these are copies which have been taken from the Pontecorvo family album-not part of this collection), and visits to the Pontecorvo Swiss Chalet in St Luc.
Most are not originals-they are prints from prints or prints from negatives. It is likely that they were used for a display at the Pontefest memorial (these ones tend to have coloured stickers on the reverse) and ended up being placed alongside Pontecorvo's personal photograph collection by his daughter, Lisa, after the memoiral.
Terms of use
Open and available at Glasgow University Archives Service.
Location of duplicates
A digitised copy is held by the Wellcome Library as part of Codebreakers: Makers of Modern Genetics. Negatives within this series have not been digitised.
Where to find it
Location of original
The original material is held at Glasgow University Archive Services. This catalogue is held by the Wellcome Library as part of Codebreakers: Makers of Modern Genetics.