Sousa Stars and Stripes Forever

John Philip Sousa (1854–1932) was the best known and most widely appreciated band leader and composer of marching music in turn of the century America (19th-20th century turn that is). He was conductor of the U.S. Marine Band from 1880 to 1892, then formed his own band. In 1900 his band was chosen to represent the United States at the Paris Exposition, and that is where this public domain photograph was taken, during the band’s performance of Sousa’s composition ‘Stars and Stripes Forever.’ Sousa was always reluctant to play for the radio, but when finally persuaded in 1929, he was an instant hit. Several of his marches were also recorded on record disks, including ‘Stars and Stripes Forever’ in 1909.
This public domain image was taken by William Herman Rau (1855-1920) while photographing the Paris Exposition of 1900. A native of Philadelphia Pennsylvania, Rau learned photography as a teen, while courting the daughter of photographer William Bell (1830-1910) who was a daguerreian in Philadelphia before 1850, and had studio there into the 1880s. Rau began photographing for the government in 1874, his first expedition to the south Pacific to observe a transit of Venus across the sun. William H Rau married Louise Bell about 1877. Later he went on expeditions in the West, then opened his own studio in Philadelphia with his brother George. He seems to have loved traveling since he also took photos in Egypt and all over the United States. In the 1890s he was also a photographer for the Pennsylvania Railroad and later the Lehigh Valley Railroad, which enhanced his reputation as a landscape photographer.




