The vintage images of Ashtabula County covered bridges on this page are the work of the late Walter Jack.
They were contact printed from 5-by-7-inch negatives owned by Jack’s granddaughter, Karen Rang, of Erie, Pa.
Jack was a prolific writer and photographer who lived in Northeast, Pa., but made frequent trips to Ashtabula County. A Hillsdale, Mich., native, Jack became connected to this area and relocated here after marrying a woman from Pierpont.
Rang, who was 10 when Jack died, recalls her grandfather as a man with a passion for history and covered bridges. He also had a great memory, which was full of details that he took to the grave.
“He knew where (the bridges) were, so he never marked (their locations on the negatives/prints),” Rang says. “He had a fantastic memory.
Jack was a professional photographer and had a portrait studio in his Northeast home. He wrote for the Erie Times, a New York paper and probably many other publications. Little of his work survived because he preserved it by pasting the articles in wallpaper sample books that were stored in the attic. Mice and time accordingly destroyed much of that work, although several of the books were given to the Jennie Munger Gregory Museum of the Ashtabula County Historical Society.
The library at the museum was named in his honor. Many of the old books that once populated the shelves of that room were from his personal library, a once massive collection that shared the second floor of his home with the studio, recalls Rang.
These days the museum’s library is more focused on providing access to local-history materials, so the books from his collection are not displayed. However, Jack’s writings on local history have been collected and are available there, says Jean Metcalf, a historical society volunteer who has worked on the project.
Jack’s photos, for the most part, did not fare as well. Rang says her grandfather’s estate included “boxes and boxes” of negatives, which were acquired by her parents, the late Edward and Hazel Jack, after his death. They were stored in the basement of their home and remained there until 2005, when her parents’ estate was liquidated.
“The boxes were totally mold. You couldn’t separate (the negatives),” she said.
A handful survived. Appropriately, they are of covered bridges.
“He loved his bridges,” Rang says.
Currents
Bridges from another era
Walter Jack’s images preserve Ashtabula County’s ‘forgotten crossings’ on sheets of film
- Currents
-
-
Steaming into eternity
Edward Pfister, the lighthouse keeper at Conneaut, was erecting a fog signal bell on the lighthouse tower when the carferry Marquette and Bessemer No. 2 steamed out of the harbor late in the morning of Dec. 7, 1909.
-
The missing Heifner mystery
Lambert Mason Heifner had big plans for Geneva, Ohio.
-
From bikes to autos
On the west side of Geneva is an Ohio Historical Society marker that alerts motorists to the birthplace of an American automotive industry giant, Ransom E. Olds.
-
The institute on the knoll
Its alumni include one of the first female judges in the United States, a scholar who worked on the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, the founder of Dallas Theological Seminary, a famous Lincoln impersonator and numerous prominent attorneys, educators and lecturers.
-
A princess with Conneaut connections
The atmosphere in the Cafe Falillard reeked of illicit romance.
-
Mr. Hulett’s invention
When the shipping season opened at Conneaut 113 years ago this spring, there was on the ore dock a new piece of machinery that looked like something left over from “The War of the Worlds.”
-
The McAdams mystery
In an old section of Edgewood Cemetery, perched near the Ashtabula River Gulf, is a row of worn, simple tombstones that give no hint of the great mystery behind the deaths they represent.
-
Saga of the John B. Lyon
The hurricane that smashed into Galveston, Texas, on Sept. 8, 1900, left up to 12,000 individuals dead in its wake.
-
Walter Main memorabilia back on display in Geneva
When Mike Lubin first moved to Madison and saw the sign for Walter Main Road on the west side of Geneva, he thought it read “Water Main” and decided to check it out.
-
Orwell’s man of adventure and the circus
There must be something in the blood of Scotsmen that makes them successful as circus owners.
- More Currents Headlines
-
Steaming into eternity


