Albumen print of enslaved women and their children near Alexandria..., Dec 2, 1861 to Mar 10, 1862. Creator: James E. Larkin.

Albumen print of enslaved women and their children near Alexandria..., Dec 2, 1861 to Mar 10, 1862. Creator: James E. Larkin.

2-832-995 - Heritage Art/Heritage Images

Albumen print of enslaved African-American women and their children near Alexandria, Virginia, December 2, 1861 to March 10, 1862. An albumen print on paper with a purple, reddish-brown hue depicting two adult women and seven children pictured, from left to right: William, Lucinda, Fannie (seated on Lucinda's lap), Mary (in cradle), Frances (standing), Martha, Julia (behind Martha), Harriet, and Charles or Marshall. Lucinda Hughes and Frances Hughes were sisters-in-law through Frances's husband David. The group is posed outside in front of bare trees, one woman is posed as if ironing. Baskets and a dog or doll house are placed around the group. The women and their children were enslaved at the time this photograph was taken on a plantation just west of Alexandria, Virginia, that belonged to Felix Richards. Frances and her children were enslaved by Felix, while Lucinda and her children were enslaved by his wife, Amelia Macrae Richards. Attributed to James E. Larkin.


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. James E. Larkin, attributed to: American: Photographer

Medium
  1. Albumen prints
  2. Photograph
  3. Portraits

Picture Type
  1. Heritage art
  2. Portrait

Geographic Hierarchy

World North and Central America United States Virginia

  1. 37 00 00 N , 080 00 00 W

Category Hierarchy

Artistic Representations Portraits

People Other


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 6318x5089
File Size : 94,197kb


Aliases

  1. 2014.174.8
  1. NMAAHC-2014_174_8_001
  1. 0990005251
  1. 2-832-995
  1. 2014.174.8
  1. 2832995

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