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Manchester was quick to embrace photographic technology. Louis Daguerre introduced his photographic process in 1839 and licensed Manchester's first photographic studio two years later. In 1842, John Benjamin Dancer, a leading Manchester scientific instrument maker, took the first known photograph of Manchester.
Dancer went on to devise improved
lantern projectors and new photographic techniques. He invented the
microphotography process in 1852 and the binocular stereoscopic
camera in 1853. Another pioneer, Manchester chemist J. T. Chapman,
introduced the first reliable ready-prepared negative plates in
about 1880. Thornton-Pickard, formed in 1888, became a successful
maker of shutters and reflex cameras.
Soon after its first public film show in
1896, Manchester had more cinemas than anywhere in Britain except
London. By 1910, Manchester showman Leon Gould was showing his own
films at local fairgrounds. John 'Pop' Blakeley formed Mancunian
Films in 1947 to showcase Northern humour. The company's Manchester
studio, nicknamed Jollywood, was the only one outside London in the
1950s.