National Humanities Center Resource Toolbox
The Making of African American Identity: Vol. I, 1500-1865
AFRICAN
AMERICANS
IN SLAVERY
PHOTOGRAPHS: 1847-1863*
1. AFRICAN-BORN ENSLAVED MEN, named Renty and Faseena by their owner, near
Columbia, South Carolina, March 1850 ......................................................................................................2
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University
2. LUCY, HOLDING A WHITE CHILD, ca. 1845 ........................................................................................3
Kentucky Gateway Museum Center, Maysville, Kentucky
3. AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMAN HOLDING A WHITE CHILD, ca. 1855 ...........................................3
Library of Congress
4. AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMAN HOLDING OSCAR MENARD, Louisiana, ca. 1850 ........................4
Louisiana State Museum
5. ISAAC JEFFERSON, age 72, blacksmith, Blacksburg, Virginia, ca. 1847 ................................................5
University of Virginia Library
6. ENSLAVED AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMAN holding wool carders, Virginia, ca. 1850s. ...................6
University of Virginia Library
7. AFRICAN AMERICAN BOYS, photograph labelled “Intelligent Contraband”
(slaves in Union-occupied territory), Baton Rouge, Louisiana, ca. 1863 ....................................................7
State Library of Louisiana
8. AFRICAN AMERICAN BOY, approx. age 12, photograph labelled “600 miles through swamp
and cane brake to fight for freedom,” Baton Rouge, Louisiana, ca. 1863 ...................................................7
Louisiana State University Library
9. FIVE GENERATIONS OF AN ENSLAVED AFRICAN AMERICAN FAMILY, plantation
of James Joyner Smith, Beaufort, South Carolina, 1862 .............................................................................8
Library of Congress
10. ENSLAVED AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMAN AND MEN, on Union-occupied plantation of
Confederate general Thomas Drayton, Hilton Head, South Carolina, May 1862........................................9
Library of Congress
11. ENSLAVED AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN, on Union-occupied plantation of Confederate
general Thomas Drayton, Hilton Head, South Carolina, May 1862 ..........................................................10
Library of Congress
12. ENSLAVED AFRICAN AMERICANS, “contraband” (slaves in Union-occupied territory)
with Union encampment at Cumberland Landing (Foller’s farm), Virginia, 14 May 1862 ......................11
Library of Congress
13. AFRICAN AMERICANS IN CANADA, former slaves (fugitives), Ontario, Canada, ca. 1850..............12
Ohio Historical Society
*
National Humanities Center, 2007: [Link]/pds/. Complete image credits at [Link]/pds/maai/imagecredits.
htm.
AFRICAN-BORN ENSLAVED MEN
named Renty and Faseena by their owner,
near Columbia, South Carolina, March 1850
Daguerreotypes by Joseph T. Zealy, commissioned
by Louis Agassiz for his ethnographic studies.
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University.
Permission pending.
National Humanities Center 2
LUCY, HOLDING
A WHITE CHILD
ca. 1845
Lucy was born in 1811 on Thomas
Jefferson’s plantation in Virginia
(Monticello) and was sold at public
auction in 1827, a year after Jefferson’s
death, along with her parents Lilly and
Barnaby. The child is unidentified.
Daguerreotype. of the Kentucky Gateway
Museum Center, Maysville, Kentucky. Digital
image courtesy of the Library of Congress.
Permission pending.
AFRICAN AMERICAN
WOMAN HOLDING
A WHITE CHILD
ca. 1855
Photograph: ruby ambrotype, sixth-plate,
hand-colored. Courtesy of the Library of
Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
National Humanities Center 3
AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMAN HOLDING OSCAR MENARD
Louisiana, ca. 1850
Daguerreotype, Reproduced by permission of the Louisiana State Museum, New Orleans.
National Humanities Center 4
ISAAC JEFFERSON
(ca. 1775 – ca. 1850)
age 72, blacksmith, Blacksburg, Virginia, ca. 1847
Isaac Jefferson was born on Thomas Jefferson’s plantation, Monticello, living there
until 1822 when he was hired out to Jefferson’s son-in-law to build a threshing machine.
Copyprint of daguerreotype. University of Virginia Library, Tracey W. McGregor Library of American History,
Special Collections Department, Isaac Jefferson Collection. Permission pending.
National Humanities Center 5
ENSLAVED AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMAN
HOLDING WOOL CARDERS
Virginia, ca. 1850s
Copyprint of daguerreotype. University of Virginia Library, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library,
Papers of the Minor Family. Permission pending.
National Humanities Center 6
AFRICAN AMERICAN BOYS
photograph labelled “Intelligent Contraband”
[slaves in Union-occupied territory],
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, ca. 1863
Source: U.S. Army Military History Institute, Carlisle
Barracks, Pennsylvania. Reproduced by permission
of the State Library of Louisiana.
AFRICAN AMERICAN BOY
photograph labelled “600 miles through swamp
and cane brake to fight for freedom”
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, ca. 1863
Louisiana State University Library, Special Collections, John
Langdon Ward Lantern Slides. Permission pending.
National Humanities Center 7
FIVE GENERATIONS OF AN ENSLAVED
AFRICAN AMERICAN FAMILY
plantation of James Joyner Smith
Beaufort, South Carolina, 1862
Photograph by Timothy H. O’Sullivan. Courtesy of the Library of Congress,
Prints & Photographs Division, Civil War Photograph Collection.
National Humanities Center 8
ENSLAVED AFRICAN
AMERICANS
Union-occupied plantation of
Confederate general Thomas
Drayton, Hilton Head, South
Carolina, May 1862
Photograph by Henry P. Moore. Courtesy of
the Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs
Division, Civil War Photograph Collection.
National Humanities Center 9
ENSLAVED AFRICAN
AMERICANS
Union-occupied plantation of
Confederate general Thomas
Drayton, Hilton Head, South
Carolina, May 1862
Photograph by Henry P. Moore. Courtesy of
the Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs
Division, Civil War Photograph Collection.
National Humanities Center 10
ENSLAVED AFRICAN
AMERICANS
“contraband” (slaves in Union-
occupied territory) with Union
encampment at Cumberland
Landing (Foller’s farm), Virginia,
14 May 1862
Photograph by James F. Gibson.
Courtesy of the Library of Congress,
Prints & Photographs Division,
Civil War Glass Negative Collection.
National Humanities Center 11
Standing: Mrs. Anne Mary Jane Hunt, Mansfield Smith, Seated: Henry Stevenson, Bush Johnson.
Mrs. Lucinda Seymour.
AFRICAN AMERICANS IN CANADA
FORMER SLAVES (FUGITIVES)
Windsor, Ontario, Canada, ca. 1850.
Reproduced by permission of the New York Public Library.
National Humanities Center 12