A. “Pat” Rogers — Brownsville’s Modern Eye (1931–1963)
When people think of early photography in Brownsville, the name that rises first is Robert Runyon. His images helped define how we see the city’s boom years in the early twentieth century. But by the 1930s, a new generation of photographers arrived — men who embraced newer technologies and built studios designed for permanence rather than improvisation.
Among them was a man known simply in newspaper print as “A. Rogers.”
For decades, he was little more than a studio stamp on the back of fading family portraits. Today, through scattered newspaper clippings, surviving negatives, and recollections, we can begin restoring his place in Brownsville’s visual history.
As noted in an earlier summary of his career , Rogers represents a transitional generation — bridging the era between Runyon’s glass plates and the post-war explosion of commercial photography.
This is the story of A. “Pat” Rogers.
The Arrival — 1931
In April 1931, Brownsville gained a new photographer.
A. “Pat” Rogers, born in Waldron, Arkansas (1902 or 1904), arrived after spending a month scouting the Lower Rio Grande Valley. He had already accumulated ten years of commercial experience in Greenville and Dallas before deciding Brownsville offered the best opportunity.
He opened his studio on the second floor of the Putegnat Building at 1149½ East Elizabeth Street.
A June 8, 1931 Brownsville Herald article proudly announced:
“Photographs live forever.”
It was more than advertising language. It was a philosophy.
Rogers introduced modern panchromatic color-corrected materials, promising truer tonal rendering. He offered Kodak finishing, enlargements, and individual attention to every roll of film. From the start, he positioned himself not as a transient portrait man, but as a permanent professional presence.
Portrait Work Is Real Study — 1935
By 1935, Rogers had established himself firmly.
A February 25, 1935 Herald feature titled “Portrait Work Is Real Study” described a studio offering:
Fine portrait photography
Commercial photography
Motion pictures
Photostatic work
Restoration of faded photographs
Kodak finishing
The article emphasized that portraiture was not mechanical — it was learned craft. Retouching negatives, mastering light angles, understanding expression — this was disciplined work.
He was also one of the few moving picture cameramen south of San Antonio. His films included:
The Tarpon Rodeo
Brownsville segments of “Flying the Lindbergh Trail” for Pan-American
In other words, Rogers was not only recording families — he was recording the Valley itself.
Civic Man, Arkansas Roots
Rogers quickly embedded himself in the community.
He was:
A Methodist
A Lions Club member
An outdoorsman who hunted and fished in Mexico
A friend of Bob Burns (also from Arkansas)
He and his wife had one daughter.
He joined the boards of the Southwestern and Texas Professional Photographers Associations and was elected vice-president of the state organization. By 1942, he had become president of the Texas Professional Photographers Association.
He was not merely running a studio — he was helping shape the profession in Texas.
Expansion and Airplanes — 1940–1942
By 1940, Rogers relocated to East Levee Street and expanded.
Services now included:
Blueprinting
Commercial copy work
Photo supplies for amateurs
Enlargements
Aerial photography
He also learned to fly under instruction from Les Mauldin, becoming a member of the Civil Air Patrol.
Photography from the air was not common in Brownsville. Rogers embraced it early.
The 1940s would mark his most ambitious years.
Ten Years Strong — 1940 Anniversary
In 1940, Rogers celebrated his tenth anniversary with a large Herald advertisement showing:
Blueprint department
Retail department
Camera room
Complete photographic services
He advertised “A Complete Photographic Service” — portrait, commercial, aerial, copy work, enlarging, Kodak finishing.
This was no small-town storefront. It was a full-service photographic enterprise.
The Music Store — 1945
In 1945, Rogers purchased a building at 1336 East Elizabeth Street and opened a music store.
Why would a photographer open a music store?
Because technology was converging.
By late 1946 and into 1947, Rogers offered:
Professional sound recordings
Phonograph record production
Recording studio services in the rear of his Levee Street studio
A 1947 Herald article titled “Group Cuts Recording” showed local musicians recording in his facility.
This was forward-thinking. Rogers saw the shift: photography, sound, retail electronics — all related.
He was building a multimedia enterprise before that word existed.
Post-War Growth — 1948
In 1948, Rogers erected a new two-story building next door to his music store.
Post-war building restrictions had lifted. Downtown Brownsville saw new construction. Rogers was part of that wave.
The building housed:
Office space upstairs
A men’s clothing store below
His studio was modernized with air conditioning provided by John H. and Earl Hunter — names synonymous with mechanical innovation in Brownsville.
He was investing heavily — and visibly — in downtown’s future.
A Changing Industry — 1950
1957 Palmetto ad
By 1950, Brownsville’s established studios publicly warned against “itinerant photographers” — fly-by-night operators offering cut-rate work and disappearing.
The notice listed six established studios:
Rogers Studio
Burgess Studio
Holm Studio
K. Welch Studio
Alex Studio
Morales Studio
Rogers was firmly among the city’s trusted professionals.
Yet change was coming.
Amateur photography exploded after World War II. Cameras became affordable. Families began taking their own snapshots.
By 1957, Rogers discontinued his portrait department.
Instead, he pivoted to:
Camera sales
Film supplies
Greeting cards
Small electronics
He adapted rather than resisted.
The Sudden End — 1963
In October 1963, A. “Pat” Rogers died suddenly.
His professional staff kept the business operating for several years after his death — a testament to how structured and well-managed the operation had become.
But over time, negatives were dispersed. Collections fragmented. Storage lockers emptied.
The Brownsville Treasure Collection
A collection of 4” x 5” film negatives discovered in Austin after a storage forfeiture is now referredto as:
The Brownsville Treasure Collection of Photographs from the A. Rogers Studio (late 1940s–early 1950s).
These negatives may represent one of the last substantial surviving bodies of Rogers’ work.
And they matter.
Because, as Rogers himself once said:
“Photographs live forever.”
They do — if someone saves them.
Why A. Rogers Matters
Robert Runyon gave us early Brownsville.
A. “Pat” Rogers documented:
Depression-era survival
Wartime transition
Post-war optimism
Downtown modernization
The rise of amateur photography
The blending of photography, sound, and retail technology
He stands as the bridge between eras.
His name deserves to be remembered alongside Runyon, Morales, and the others who fixed Brownsville’s image in silver.







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