Enjoy the holiday season with chilly Chattanooga blasts from the pasts courtesy of the Herman Lamb Photographs collection.
Herman Lamb (1917-2011) was a photographer native to Chattanooga, Tennessee. At the age of eight, Lamb discovered his passion for photography with his brother in their home darkroom. From that time, he began taking photos in and around his hometown. During World War II, Lamb was contracted by the military to photograph the Womens Army Corps (WAC). Lamb was actively involved in the Northside Baptist Church with his wife, Dorothy Lamb. The two opened the Camera Center on Eighth Street until their retirement in 1986. Many of Lamb’s photographs have been featured in books, magazines, and postcards, including the History of Chattanooga, Encyclopedia Britannica, Popular Photography, American Home, Progressive Farmer, Southern Living, National Geographic, and the National Railway Historical Society Magazine. His collection includes photographic prints and negatives of downtown, landscapes, and events in Chattanooga from 1920 to 1970.
Cuddle up with a blanket and a mug a cocoa and enjoy the snowy scenes captured by Herman Lamb.
![Black-and-white aerial photograph of the Lookout Mountain Hotel with snow on the ground, located in Lookout Mountain, Georgia, near Chattanooga, Tennessee. The building is now Carter Hall and the signature building of the Covenant College campus. Photographed by Herman Lamb circa 1935.](https://blog.utc.edu/library/files/2017/12/MS-134-20-006-001.jpg)
![Black-and-white photograph of a snowman located in downtown Chattanooga, Tennessee. Photographed by Herman Lamb circa 1940s.](https://blog.utc.edu/library/files/2017/12/MS-134-05-010-001.jpg)
![Black-and-white photograph of a car covered in snow in downtown Chattanooga, Tennessee. Photographed by Herman Lamb in 1950.](https://blog.utc.edu/library/files/2017/12/MS-134-06-005-001.jpg)