Black History across the Commons – Part 2
Posted by zyrcster in Across The CommonsOur celebration continues with part two of our Black History Month subcurated collection. We bring you a selection of images from renowned photographers of the 19th and 20th centuries.
| Rosebud Denham in embossed dress and feather hat
The State Archives of Florida holds a collection of images from noted portrait photographer Alvan S. Harper. Alvan S. Harper was born in Norristown, Pennsylvania, in 1847. Between 1870 and 1884, he was a professional photographer in Philadelphia. Harper moved to Tallahassee in 1884. He was soon advertising that he would take “artistic photographs” in his first studio, a room in the house he was renting. He moved twice before buying a house and building his own studio, where he worked between 1889 and his death in 1911. |
![]() State Archives of Florida |
| Man with sideburns wearing dark coat
Some of Harper’s best negatives were lost when his studio was torn down in the 1920s. The negatives had been given to a Tallahassee historian who, because they were dirty, left them on a porch where they were mistaken for trash and taken to the dump. About 2,000 more Harper negatives were found in 1946 in the attic of the house he had owned. A Tallahassee photographer printed 250 negatives and circulated the prints in the community for identification. |
![]() State Archives of Florida |
| Navy Hill School
At the Library of Virginia is the Adolph B. Rice Studio Collection, which constitutes a unique photographic record of life in Richmond, Virginia from 1949 to 1961. The collection consists of more than 16,000 4×5-inch film negatives from the commercial studio of Adolph B. Rice. |
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| City recreation, tennis
Adolph B. Rice Sr. (1909–1960) opened his first photo studio in Richmond in 1949. The studio remained on North Auburn Avenue until it ceased operation in 1961. His clients included businesses, industry, and state and local government. The Library invites the public to identify the images and provide captions for the more than 200 Rice Studio photographs on Flickr. |
![]() Library of Virginia |
| Going to town on Saturday afternoon, Greene Co., Ga. –by Jack Delano, May 1941. During the Great Depression, in 1935, the Farm Service Administration was developed as part of Roosevelt’s New Deal to to combat American rural poverty. The Library of Congress is the repository for all of these now-famous images by the leading photographers of the era. |
![]() Library of Congress |
| Negro boy near Cincinnati, Ohio 6— by John Vachon, 1942 or ‘43. The FSA is famous for its small but highly influential photography program, led under the auspices of Roy Stryker, that realistically portrayed the challenges of rural poverty. Check out the comments on this photo as a leading example of the power of the Flickr Commons to encourage healthy debate and community. |
![]() Library of Congress |
| Bayou Bourbeau plantation, an FSA cooperative, Natchitoches, La. A Negro family (?) seated on the porch of a house — by Marion Post Wolcott, 1940.
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![]() Library of Congress |
| Negro school children, Omar, W. Va. — by Ben Shahn The New York Public Library also has some FSA holdings. Its collection on Flickr does not overlap the LOC’s (so far!). Learn more about the NYPL’s holdings by visiting their Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture website. |
![]() New York Public Library |
| Omar, mining town, West Virginia, 1935 —by Ben Shahn.
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![]() New York Public Library |
Tags: Black History Month, Library of Congress, Library of Virginia, New York Public Library, State Library and Archives of Florida









