Booth-Grunendike Family Photographs
Scope and Contents
This collection was reprocessed in August and September of 2025. The previous order was largely maintained.
This collection primarily contains photographs documenting five generations of the Booth and Grunendike families, their properties in Springfield and the surrounding areas, their social activities, and their travels. There are approximately four thousand photographs, including cartes-de-visite, cabinet cards and cyanotypes, as well as scrapbooks, newspaper clippings and memorabilia. Both Mary Booth-Grunendike and Edward H. Grunendike came from large families, and relatives photographed include members of the Richardson, Reynolds, Crates, McCosker, Appleyard, Howarth, and Dickerson families. A family tree is available upon request.
Additional photographic topics include farming activities; natural disasters and fires; parades and festivals; buildings and monuments in Springfield, Decatur, Beardstown, Quincy and Chicago; President McKinley's 1898 visit to Springfield; the inaugurations of Illinois governors; Camp Tanner and soldiers of the Spanish-American War; the 1908 Springfield Race Riot; and masonic organizations.
The collection is divided into three series: Loose Photographs, Photograph Albums, and Scrapbooks and Papers. The photographs in Series I are largely duplicates of those in Series II, and photographs in Series II are generally better identified due to the presence of captions in the albums.
Each photograph has been assigned a unique ID number, and locations and subjects have been identified when possible. Some photographs have additional information regarding their subject in the item’s Scope and Content field, particularly photographs featuring four or more people. Aside from Mary Booth-Grunendike, women’s maiden names are indicated by brackets (for example, Mary Booth-Grunendike’s mother Harriot [Richardson] Booth).
Series I: Loose Photographs, circa 1877-1930, contains photographs organized by topic. They depict the Booth and Grunendike families, friends and acquaintances, nature, and events, local businesses, homes, and monuments in Springfield and Chicago. In addition to standard photographs, formats include cartes-de-vistes, cabinet cards and cyanotypes. Arranged alphabetically.
Series II: Photograph Albums, circa 1890-1943, consists of twenty albums of photographs, likely taken and compiled by Mary Booth-Grunendike. Many photographs are duplicated across the albums. The photographs depict members of the Booth and Grunendike families, their properties in Springfield and the surrounding areas, local businesses and events, and their travels around the Midwest and elsewhere.
The albums are arranged in roughly chronological order. Albums 1-15 more heavily feature Mary Booth-Grunendike’s parents, aunts and uncles, siblings, and E. Booth Grunendike and his cousins as children. Albums 16-20 more heavily feature E. Booth Grunendike, his wife Rose May [Horn] Grunendike, and their daughter Rose Mary Grunendike, as well as trips taken by Mary Booth-Grunendike and Edward H. Grunendike in later years. The Scope and Content note for each album provides additional information about their subject matter.
Series III: Scrapbooks and Papers, circa 1872-1947, contains three scrapbooks likely compiled by Mary Booth-Grunendike and a small amount of papers relating to the family’s businesses and social activities. The scrapbooks primarily contain newspaper clippings relating to the Booth and Grunendike families and events of popular interest.
Dates
- 1872-1947
Creator
- Booth-Grunendike Family (Family)
Access
The collection is open under the rules and regulations of the University of Illinois-Springfield (UIS).
Copyrights
Copyrights to this collection are held by UIS.
Biography
Albert Booth (1813-1873) moved with his family from Maine to Illinois around 1840, where he settled seven miles north of Springfield. Trained as a wagon and carriage maker, Booth initially provided repair services in a small shop and in 1854 established the A. Booth and Son Wagon Factory in Springfield. His third son, Amasa S. Booth (1835-1924), trained in his shop and succeeded him in running the factory after his death. Amasa partnered with his brother-in-law Alex McCosker (1835-1918) to form Booth and McCosker Carriage and Spring Wagon Manufacturers.
The factory at Eighth and Washington streets grew, and the company became known for the durability and workmanship of their carriages throughout the region. The partners sold the business in 1886, after which Amasa S. Booth focused on his farms and other properties in Springfield, Buffalo, Cartwright, and Lanesville.
Amasa S. Booth married Harriot Richardson on August 17, 1872, and the couple had seven children: Mary Booth-Grunendike (1865-1967), John R. Booth (1867-1916), William D. Booth (1869-1928), Alexander M. Booth (1871-1937), Amasa S. Booth Jr. (1875-1927), Jacob F. Booth (1877-1941), and Albert Booth (1879-1880). Amasa S. Booth purchased a home at 500 South 6th St in 1881, where members of the family resided until it was sold in 1976.
Mary Booth married Edward Howell Grunendike (1856-1934) in 1887. Grunendike was a resident of Decatur, Illinois, and worked as a train dispatcher for the Wabash Railroad from 1875-1913. The couple lived in Decatur for a time before moving to Springfield. Mary was a member of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church and an active member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Eastern Star, and the Women’s Club in Decatur. She was also an amateur photographer, and is presumed to have taken many of the photographs in this collection.
The couple had one son, Edward Booth Grunendike (1890-1956), who generally went by Booth. E. Booth Grunendike managed a large farm on the current site of Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport and was involved in real estate and insurance business. He married Rose May Horn (1890-1971) and the couple had one child, Rose Mary Grunendike (1928-2010). Rose Mary Grunendike graduated from Ursuline Academy and worked for the State of Illinois Department of Agriculture and the Department of Public Aid.
Both Mary Booth-Grunendike and Edward H. Grunendike came from large families, many of whom lived in Springfield and the surrounding areas. A family tree is available upon request.
Extent
4.5 Linear Feet
Language of Materials
English
Provenance
Purchased at auction in July 1976 by Charles Strozier and gifted to the archives.
Property Rights
UIS owns the property rights to this collection.
Processing Information
This collection was reprocessed in September 2025. The previous order was largely maintained.
Creator
- Booth-Grunendike Family (Family)
- Title
- Finding Aid to the Booth-Grunendike Family Photographs
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the UIS Archives/Special Collections Repository
Archives/Special Collections LIB 144
One University Plaza, MS BRK 140
Springfield IL 62703-5407 US
217-206-6520
archives@uis.libanswers.com
