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FRIDAY, MAY 16, 2025
The man who owned 3,000 cameras

Offbeat

11 September, 2020, 01:05 pm
Last modified: 11 September, 2020, 01:11 pm

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The man who owned 3,000 cameras

11 September, 2020, 01:05 pm
Last modified: 11 September, 2020, 01:11 pm
Kodak Instamatic cameras are just a small selection of the eclectic array Photo: Dave Smith
Kodak Instamatic cameras are just a small selection of the eclectic array Photo: Dave Smith

One of the largest camera collections in the world is hidden away in a small village of Scotland- but hardly anybody knows it is there.

At least 3,000 cameras, including some dating back well over a century, belonged to the late Neville "Jim" Matthew, reported BBC in a special report published on Friday. 

He retired to the picturesque East Neuk village of St Monans after a career that took him around the world.

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Kodak Cine Cameras, including (from right) a Brownie Movie and a Brownie Turret camera Photo: Dave Smith
Kodak Cine Cameras, including (from right) a Brownie Movie and a Brownie Turret camera Photo: Dave Smith

He took over the former Salvation Army hall to store his treasured collection. Inside the hall, row after row of cameras, accessories and memorabilia fill the shelves.

They include stereoscopic and 3D cameras as well as East European models, including many that were rare in the West.
At the heart of the collection is an array of Kodak Brownie cameras - featuring almost every model ever produced.

Jim Matthew collected cameras all round the world
Jim Matthew collected cameras all round the world

The Brownie was the first affordable camera and could be bought for just one dollar when it was first sold in 1900.

Jim had wanted his collection to be an open attraction, but he was getting older and in ill health, and the task posed too big a challenge.

Instead, he was limited to opening once a year for the village festival and for occasional private viewings.

"He really enjoyed talking to people about it when they came into the hall," says his widow Dorothy.

"I had to come down and rescue them sometimes because he did not know when to stop.

"He was a very good speaker. He didn't have a small talk but if it was something he was interested in he could talk for a long time."

Jim, who died aged 81 at the end of 2017, had begun the collection 24 years earlier on a trip to Vancouver in Canada to see his daughter.

Backdrop: advert for Kodak instamatic camera. Foreground, left to right: No.1 Kodal, Brownie Pliant, Six-16 folding camera (USA); Brownie Flash, Six-20, c.1941; Kodak Regent, Compur shutter, Zeiss Tessar lens, folding camera, c.1935-39 (Germany) Photo: Dave Smith
Backdrop: advert for Kodak instamatic camera. Foreground, left to right: No.1 Kodal, Brownie Pliant, Six-16 folding camera (USA); Brownie Flash, Six-20, c.1941; Kodak Regent, Compur shutter, Zeiss Tessar lens, folding camera, c.1935-39 (Germany) Photo: Dave Smith

They were wandering around antique shops and his wife Dorothy bought him an old camera as a present.
Soon after, as Jim recovered from heart surgery, they travelled down the west coast of the US to Oregon where there were a lot of antique shops.

"He started to potter around and find quite a few cameras that he liked," Dorothy says.

"It expanded from there. When he got his mind into something he goes all out.

Kodak Retina and Retinette models Photo: Dave Smith
Kodak Retina and Retinette models Photo: Dave Smith

"He won't stop. He never really said why. It was just that he started and continued."
Dorothy says Jim was collecting "at the best time" because people were getting rid of their old cameras in favour of new digital models.

"Whenever he went somewhere he would always come back with a case load of cameras," she says.

He travelled a lot for work and pleasure and he would always search out flea markets or places selling second-hand items.

Poland proved a very fruitful destination as they were getting rid of a lot of Russian cameras from the Soviet era.
"He would try to find cameras from every country when he went on holiday," Dorothy says.

He would also ask friends if they had time to find a camera for him, and they very often did.

Jim was born in Bolton in Lancashire and went to sea as an engineer cadet.

Jim bought the local Salvation Army hall to house his collection Photo: Dave Smith
Jim bought the local Salvation Army hall to house his collection Photo: Dave Smith

During his time at sea, his parents moved to Glasgow, where he met Dorothy - and changed his name from Neville, which was not one that went down well in Scotland.
The couple were soon married and had three children.

Jim's work as a marine engineer took him all around the world.

The family lived for seven years in Hong Kong, two years in Greece, five years in Holland and 12 years in Canada.

Dorothy says Jim "lived for travel" and there were very few places he had not visited.

He went on many trips on his own because he was only interested in being behind the camera, his wife says.

Brownie Flash 20’s Photo: Dave Smith
Brownie Flash 20’s Photo: Dave Smith

"Me being there was a waste of money.

"He took good photographs so I think he enjoyed the results. He wanted to make it more of a picture rather than just a photo. He was completely absorbed with it."

As Jim's collection grew, the couple lived in Holland and he stored his cameras at his office.

In preparation for retirement, they bought a house in St Monans to be near Dorothy's mother.

It was not big enough to store the camera collection - so Jim bought the local Salvation Army Hall.

Almost three years after his death Dorothy is working with a charitable trust to transfer ownership of the building and the collection and turn it into a museum.

Dorothy, who now lives in Canada, said she was "delighted" at the prospect.

"I had no idea that could happen and I was worrying about what we would do," she says.

"I didn't want them to be thrown out."

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