Kicha's photos

Joan Louise Turpin Howard

17 Oct 2023 13
Photo: The Colored American Magazine (July 1902) The Howards were among several socially prominent free black families living in the city's affluent West End in the 1850s. Mrs. Howard and her husband, Edward Frederick Howard (1813-1893), were active in the anti-slavery movement and fought to end segregation of Massachusetts public schools in 1855. Their two daughters, Adeline (b. 1845) and Joan Imogene (b. 1850), became distinguished educators, while their son, Edwin Clarence (1846-1912), was the first African American graduate of Harvard Medical School. [Smithsonian] nmaahc.si.edu/explore/manylenses/mirroring-history

Vintage Woman

17 Oct 2023 14
A beautiful and sadly unknown woman poses for her formal portrait. [ D.H. Ramsey Library, Special Collections, UNC Asheville ]

Vintage Miss

17 Oct 2023 14
An unknown beauty photographed sometime in the late 19th century. L. D. Shaw Studio, Fond du Lac, WI

Hand Painted Miss

17 Oct 2023 15
This heavily hand-tinted tintype was in the possession of Iris Sloman Bell, of St. Catharines, Ontario. Relatives of the Bell-Sloman families include former slaves from the United States who escaped to Canada. They later settled in the London and St. Catharines areas of southern Ontario. [ Rick Bell Family, Brock University Archives, Brock University ]

Vintage Woman

21 Jul 2008 13
Tintype of an African American woman. Name, locale and photographer unknown. Daniel Cowin Collection

Vintage Lady

17 Oct 2023 14
Ambrotype of an unknown African American woman, circa 1860s. Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs (Library of Congress)

Vintage Lady

17 Oct 2023 14
A carte-de-visite of an unknown woman taken in Topeka, Kansas at the W.P. Bliss Photography Studio. Kansas Historical Society

Vintage Lady

17 Oct 2023 13
Unknown young lady poses for her formal portrait in New York. C.M. Marsh, Photographer, Randolph Linsly Simpson Collection

Vintage Lady

17 Oct 2023 12
Daguerreotype of an unknown young lady wearing a checkered dress, two rings on her left hand, brooch at her collar and a hunters case pocket watch attached to her belt. E. Willard, Photographer; Cowan Auctions

Vintage Ladies

17 Oct 2023 13
Two African American women who appear to be related .... possibly siblings. Names unknown. Hugh Mangum Photographs, Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library, Duke University

Vintage Miss

26 Jan 2006 14
Beautiful portrait of an unknown young woman taken at Stewart Studio in Kansas City, Missouri. Missouri Historical Society

Miss Nelly Hill

17 Oct 2023 14
Nelly Hill was a student at Virginia Normal and Collegiate Institute. She was one of seven daughters of John Henry and Rosetta Hill who attended the school. History of VSU The university was founded on March 6, 1882 as the Virginia Normal and College Institute after the state legislature passed a bill sponsored by Delegate Alfred W. Harris, a black attorney, which chartered the university. The state established the university to serve the needs of a population that was at the time excluded from other public institutions in Virginia. Virginia Normal and College Institute opened as a teacher training college for both male and female black students but it also included a modest liberal arts curriculum. The campus opened on October 1, 1883 with 126 students and seven faculty members, all of whom were black, on an operating budget of $20,000. In 1885, John Mercer Langston, a leading African American figure of the time and soon to be the first African American elected to Congress from Virginia, was named the university's first president. The school changed its name to Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute in 1902 after the state legislature revised the charter and curtailed the liberal arts program. In 1920, the state moved its land-grant program for blacks from private Hampton Institute, where it had been since 1872, to Virginia Normal and Industrial College. The college program was restored in 1923 and the school was renamed the Virginia State College for Negroes in 1930. The college opened up a branch campus in Norfolk in 1944, which would later gain its independence and become Norfolk State College. In 1946, the school was renamed Virginia State College and finally, in 1979, the state legislature passed a law that renamed the institution Virginia State University. Info and Photo: Virginia State University History

Lady and her Companion

17 Oct 2023 12
An unknown woman (possibly holding a book) poses with her dog pose for their formal portrait. Photographed at O'Harra Co. Studio, in Keokuk, Iowa. This photographs comes from the Caroline Webb Papers which document three generations of an African-American family, descended from those enslaved, living in the Midwest from the mid-19th to the mid-20th century. [ Wisconsin Historical Society ]

Memories

17 Oct 2023 18
Cabinet card of a young African American woman with what appears to be letters on her lap. Gates, Branch of Forestville Studio, Chicago, Courtesy of Larry Gottheim

Mildred Hanson Baker

17 Oct 2023 12
Lovely portrait of Ms. Baker taken by African American photographer P.H. Polk. Source: Reflections in Black: A History of Black Photographers 1840 to the Present by Deborah Willis

Octavia Parker Ferguson

17 Oct 2023 15
Lovely portrait of Octavia Parker Ferguson, A. O. & Dorothy Steele Collection

Young Miss

17 Oct 2023 14
Photograph of an unknown African American young woman taken inside a photo booth, circa 1940s/1950s. Photographer unknown.

Vintage Lady

17 Oct 2023 13
Cartes-de-visite of an unknown African American young woman taken at A.E. Beers Studio in Rushville, New York. Benjamin Layton collection/Anacostia Community Museum Archives

1097 items in total