Barnett M. Clinedinst
American photographer and inventor / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the White House photographer, see Barnett McFee Clinedinst.
Barnett Michael Clinedinst (December 1835 – December 21, 1900) was an American photographer and inventor.[1] He invented the viewfinder and the mirror-and-prism "reflex" arrangement for which the single-lens reflex camera is named.[2]
He was born around December 1835 or 1837 in Woodstock, Virginia.[note 1][3] He was a bugler during the American Civil War for Stonewall Jackson.[1]
He died on December 21, 1900, in Washington, D.C. He was the father of Barnett McFee Clinedinst, who served as the official White House portrait photographer for the Presidential administrations of Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and Woodrow Wilson,[1][2] and Benjamin West Clinedinst, a painter.[4][5]