Biography

Robert A. Witbeck (1928–2017) was born in Hartford, Connecticut, the son of Robert Raymond Witbeck of Moscow, Idaho, and Ruth Atkins of West Hartford, Connecticut. He was graduated from Hamilton College in Clinton, New York, in 1950 and served in the U.S. Army from 1951 to 1953. He was a tank platoon leader and aide-de-camp, and he was honorably discharged as a Second Lieutenant.

After a brief stint with the New Haven Railroad as a locomotive fireman, Witbeck began working at Rockland Atlas National Bank of Boston in their bond department. He continued to work in Boston in the Municipal Bond market for Estabrook & Son, Colonial Management, Bank of Boston, and Kidder Peabody, until he retired in 1990. He served as president, Municipal Bond Club of Boston, 1965–1966.

He photographed the late steam era extensively, traveling throughout the United States on several extended road trips. He was also a talented artist and made several well-executed drawings of locomotives, often based on his photographs.

Witbeck was married to Amy Elliott from 1954 until her death in 1964 and they had four daughters: Amey Witbeck Witherbee of Concord, Massachusetts, the late Ruth Witbeck Somerville, Parsons Witbeck Clark of South Dartmouth, Massachusetts, and Martha Witbeck Chamberlain of Palo Alto, California. He was married to Patricia Bright from 1964 until her death in 2007. He died in 2017.

About the collection

Title
Robert A. Witbeck Collection

Dates
Span: late 1940s and 1950s

Creator
Witbeck, Robert A. (1928-2017)

Extent
1,000 medium format black-and-white negatives as well as a few 35mm color slides and original drawings of various sizes

Geographic coverage
Broad coverage of the United States

Railroad coverage
Steam locomotives at rest and in action, including on the Baltimore & Ohio, Boston & Maine, Delaware & Hudson, Illinois Central, New Haven, New York Central, Norfolk & Western, Santa Fe, Southern Pacific, Union Pacific, Virginian, and Western Maryland.

Provenance
The photographer and his daughter, Parsons Witbeck Clark, donated the Collection to the Center, working with Scott Lothes; member and volunteer Brian Solomon (who had used Witbeck photographs in some of his books) made the introduction.

Processing history & status
The Collection has been rehoused, catalogued, and fully digitized, but it includes little metadata and needs further research, particularly for location information.

Arrangement
The Center has preserved the photographer’s original order, with materials arranged alphabetically by railroad name.

Copyright status
© Center for Railroad Photography & Art

Access & restrictions
We provide images free-of-charge for small press and self-published works, personal use, as well as educational and non-profit efforts. All other users, please see our usage fee schedule for rates.