A Moment Captured In Time

Only the wealthy could afford to be photographed in the early days of cameras. For that reason we rarely see pictures of the very poor unless someone like Lewis Wickes Hines photographed a particular group of people to show conditions in the tenements or the mills or the fields.

“A young African American girl on a New Orleans street, 1909.” – This description is all that’s available about this child in the New Orleans archives.

NOLA archives

This picture is unusual because there’s not much information available about it and it doesn’t appear to be part of a set. There’s also no information about the photographer. How this lone snapshot happened to be taken and how it survived all these years and made it to the archives is a mystery.

I’d estimate she’s around 8 years old. If we look at her clothes, it’s easy to guess this little girl was growing up in some pretty desperate circumstances. On the other hand, she’s a child and children tear their clothes and get dirty. It looks like she’s a healthy weight—-thin compared to kids today but still healthy and similar to other children of the time.

This picture interested me mainly because of her posture and her facial expression. She doesn’t appear to be scared but definitely a little wary of the photographer or the camera. In fact, it was probably the first time she had seen a camera. Her head is tilted to one side and she looks intently at the camera. She seems curious… but prepared to run, if necessary! The other thing I notice about her is that she has such a determined expression on her face.

What became of this child? What did she do with her life? There’s no way to know but, based on that determination in her face, she could’ve become anything.

Benjamin Franklin said, “Energy and persistence conquer all things.”