Constance Philpitt Warner Explained

Constance Philpitt Warner
Birth Date:20 May 1897
Birth Place:Hyattsville, Maryland
Death Place:Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Occupation:Nurse, nature photographer
Nationality:American

Constance Philpitt Warner was a photographer who specialized in natural history photography and worked with the Smithsonian's National Zoo.

Biography

Warner was born in Hyattsville, Maryland on May 25, 1897.[1] She studied nursing and worked as a nurse before turning to photography. Through her marriage to Dr. Carden Warner who was an eye specialist, she developed interest in the natural protections within the structure of animals' eyes that help prevent injury.

After 1947, Warner took up photography and photographed a wide variety of animals at zoos around the world, chiefly at the National Zoo where she was based.[2] Warner's photographs are included in a collection of slides in the Smithsonian Institution Archives.[3] In the 1965 annual report, the Smithsonian identified Warner as an "honorary collaborator" to recognize the photographic work she had done and offered to the zoo for use in publication.[4] Her photography also appears in publications such as National Geographic magazine, Life, and Reader's Digest.

Warner died in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on June 10, 1992.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New York Public Library Photographers' Identity Catalog . NYPL Photographers' Identity Catalog . 9 January 2023.
  2. News: 16 June 1992 . Constance P. Warner, Photographer, Dies . Washington Post . 9 January 2023.
  3. Web site: Archives . Smithsonian Institution . 1959–1970 . Accession 16-158 Constance P. Warner Slide Collection, circa 1959-1970 . 2023-01-09 . Smithsonian Institution Archives . en.
  4. Smithsonian Year 1965 . 1965 . Smithsonian Institution . 204 . 9 January 2023.