Lantern Slide, Tuskegee Institute


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Photographs
Magic Lantern Slides
Magic Lantern Slideshow - Tuskegee Institute
Black History ➔ Lantern Slide, Tuskegee Institute

Identifier:
2021.6.23.2
Description:
This black and white photographic lantern slide depicts a group of students in a class on agriculture.

This slide is part of slideshow 2021.6.23 about the Tuskegee Institute utilized for educational purposes by the Grand Rapids Public Museum.
Date:
circa 1902
Materials:
Glass
Dimensions:
4" h 3.25" w
Current Location Status:
On Exhibit
Collection Tier:
Tier 2
Exhibit/Program:
Booker T. Washington Visits Grand Rapids (February 2023)
Between 1896 and 1901, Booker T. Washington visited Grand Rapids several times to speak about his vision of the "The New Negro of the New South" and his work at the Tuskegee Institute. In January of 1896, Washington spoke to a large crowd at Park Congregational Church (Grand Rapids Press, January 22, 1896).

The Grand Rapids Public Museum has in its collections a set of Magic Lantern Slides depicting the Tuskegee institute, its staff, students, and facilities c. 1902. These slides have no provenance information, but the museum staff believes that there may be a connection between the slides and Booker T. Washington's many visits and close connections to Grand Rapids.

Historians have written that Booker T. Washington's message of the gradual assimilation of the newly freed Black slaves into American society based on hard work, Christian values, and Republican politics was viewed very favorably in Grand Rapids. Although there were not many African Americans in Grand Rapids in the late nineteenth century, that population was growing, and the White business class was already developing forms of "managerial racism" to limit Black progress (Jelks and Robinson).

In this exhibit refresh, the GRPM has worked to integrate information about Booker T. Washington and his relationship with the City of Grand Rapids and its people into the Streets of Old Grand Rapids exhibit. The add-ons to this important core exhibit include: reconstructions of posters advertising Washington's visit to Grand Rapids in 1896, a vintage magic lantern slide projector, samples from the Tuskegee magic lantern slides, and other pieces of photographic equipment. The display will be located in the central windows of the Voigt Herpolsheimer Department Store, a place in Grand Rapids where residents may have shopped for these types of items.

Related Entities:
Tuskegee Institute (depicts) Frances Benjamin Johnston (creator)
Frances Benjamin Johnston (1864-1952) was one of the first American women to achieve prominence as a photographer. Trained at the Académie Julian in Paris, she studied photography upon her return to Washington, D.C., in the mid-1880s and opened a professional studio circa 1890. Her family's social position gave Johnston access to the First Family and leading Washington political figures and launched her career as a photojournalist and portrait photographer. Some examples of her work include: photographs covering American world's fairs; coal mining; the White House; openings of Congress; Admiral Dewey; and Progressive era educational efforts, including a survey of Washington, D.C., schools and such minority educational institutions as the Hampton Institute and the Tuskegee Institute.
(Source: Library of Congress)