Thomas Kimmwood Peters
(June 27 1879 – 1973)
was a pioneer American
motion
picture producer, newsreel cameraman,
photographer, educator, and inventor.
Education
- Attended public elementary schools and high school in the Los
Angeles area, 1884-94.
- Attended Peace College in Mexico City from 1896 to 1898.
- Earned Ph.D. at Oglethorpe University, 1939.
Association with the motion picture industry
Peters began his photography work in the motion picture industry
around 1899, with the
Pathe Freres film
company of France. Later, when he left them, he continued to work
throughout Europe at various companies in the motion picture
industry to develop his skills.
He also did photography and motion picture
work at Karnak
and Luxor
in
Egypt.
Peters was
associated with the Cosmos Film Company in San Francisco,
California
, which later became Exactus Photo Film Corporation
of Palo
Alto
. He became its first president and general
manager when it officially started operations on
August 28 1914. The company
stated that its purpose was
In the beginning, Exactus had a list of well-respected California
educators to serve on its board of directors. However, a lack of
good business management and closing skills in obtaining financial
backing caused its failure only two years later. There were also
clashes of misunderstandings between the educators and Exactus'
technicians that exacerbated the situation. By the end of 1916,
Peters held an auction of the physical items held by the bankrupt
company to raise money to pay off its creditors. What little stock
left was turned over to the Palo Alto Film Company.
Peters kept the technical and educational value of the Exactus
films at a high quality in spite of these tumultuous times. At the
Panama-Pacific
International Exposition in 1915, his company won two gold
medals and one bronze medal for films they had produced.
Association with Oglethorpe University

Oglethorpe University
Thornwell Jacobs, originator of the
Crypt of Civilization (the
world's first modern
time capsule
located at
Oglethorpe
University), hired Peters to serve as the project
archivist and general manager of development and
construction.
One of the reasons Peters was hired was for his unique skills in
photography. He used his knowledge to preserve on
microfilm and film footage items to be entered in
the Crypt for a 6,000-year storage. Peters recorded on film such
historical figures as
Adolf Hitler and
Joseph Stalin. He also included
President
Franklin D. Roosevelt and
Benito Mussolini.
Peters and his staff of student assistants worked on the Crypt
project from 1937 until 1940 when it was sealed permanently. They
put on cellulose acetate microfilm many historical events of the
19th and 20th centuries. The microfilm reels were placed into
airtight receptacles for preservation. The staff and Peters
initiated backup methods in case the acetate didn't survive. One
method Peters developed was duplicate "metal film." It was as thin
as paper.
Peters also worked on developing Oglethorpe University's historical
photographic collections. Peters was also director of the China Air
Force School at Oglethorpe University, 1945-46. He was also
professor of audio-visual education at the university.
According to Oglethorpe University Peters had been the only
newsreel photographer to film the San Francisco earthquake of 1906
and the associated fire. He was also the first to film the
construction of the Panama Canal.
Outline of career
- Artist with International Botanical Expedition to Yucatan,
1898.
- Camerman with Pathe Freres, Vincennes, France, 1899.
- Toured Europe and Northe Africa making motion pictures with a
Kinetoscope, 1900.
- Freelanced in Paris, 1902.
- Opened Peters Scenic Studio in Los Angeles, 1902.
- President of Peters Photographic Expeditions. Made 5
expeditions to Asian countries, Australia and the South Seas,
1904-05.
- Motion pictures of San Francisco earthquake aftermath,
1906.
- Motion pictures of construction of the Panama Canal, 1909.
- Technical director of several motion picture companies.
- Author and correlator of standard text films for classroom use
at Palo Alto and F.B.O. Studio, Hollywood.
- Inaugurated first regulator teaching films in New York Schools,
1920.
- Professor of psychology training specialist and manufacturing
research engineer at Lockheed Aircraft Company.
- Historian at the Los Angeles County Hollywood Museum Motion
Picture TV.
- Owner of Photographic Museum, Frontier Village, San Jose,
California.
Authored works
- Portals of the Past
- Sunoef Dixie (the script)
- Trap to Catch a Shadow
- History of Motion Picture Mechanisms
(autobiography)
- Technique of Concertography: Prelude to the Atomic
Era
Inventions
- Invented several models of the Exactus camera, 1912 -
1914.
- Invented the first microfilm camera using 35 mm film to
photograph documents, 1915.
- Invented and patented many vacuum and rare gas devices,
including first commercial rare gas tubes, 1924.
References
- Library of Congress, ID No: MSS61200
- Who's Who in America
Bibliography
- Peters, Thomas Kimmwood, The Story of the Crypt of
Civilization, (Oglethorpe University Press, Atlanta,
1940).
- Slide, Anthony, The New Historical Dictionary of the
American Film Industry, Fitzroy Dearborn 1998, ISBN
1-5795805-6-4
- The Preservation of History in the Crypt of
Civilization, journal of Society of Motion Picture Engineers
(February 1940), pp. 209–10.
- Who's Who in America With World Notables (Chicago,
1978), subject of item # 1712 - "Thomas Kimmwood Peters", Library
of Congress Card No. 43-3789, ISBN 0-8379-0210-X
- Library of Congress, ID No: MSS61200
- *Papers of Thomas Kimmwood Peters
- :Span Dates: 1896-1973 (bulk 1915-1968)
- :Creator: Peters, Thomas Kimmwood, 1879-1973
- :Repository: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress,
Washington, D.C.
Newsreel footage

Early film of the 1906 San Francisco
Earthquake aftermath. Views of destruction taken from a vehicle
moving east down Market Street.