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Showing posts with label Natchez Mississippi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Natchez Mississippi. Show all posts

Sunday, June 3, 2018

Remembering the Enslaved: Delia -- A guest post by Tom Scarborough


This is an oil portrait that has been in my family since the 1840s. It is of an enslaved woman named Delia. 

She was the house servant to my great, great, great grandfather, William Bisland, at Mount Repose, the family's plantation near Natchez, MS. 

It was painted by James Reid Lambdin, a relative of the Bislands by marriage. Lambdin also painted the official portraits of presidents Zachary Taylor, and William Henry Harrison. 

This painting hung in the library of my grandparents' house in Washington D.C. for several decades. I remember being entranced by it when I would visit them. It is currently on exhibit at the Mississippi Museum of Art, in Jackson, MS. 

I went to Jackson last week to see Delia for the first time in at least twenty years. It was strange seeing in a public space, this painting that was a part of my ancestors' history, and a poignant reminder of their implication in the system of American racial slavery. 

William Henry Harrison

Zachary Taylor


Having done my graduate work in the study of the plantation slave economy, I am fascinated by the historical nuances of this painting. 


My Natchez family was deeply involved in the slave economy, owning over 400 human beings spread over five plantations, from Natchez, to Terrebonne Parish, LA. 

I don't know if the family commissioned this painting; if so, it would have been very unusual as slaveowners did not typically commission portraits of their human property. Oil portraits of enslaved persons are exceedingly rare. If they did, however, it would speak to the bonds that sometimes did form between bondspersons and those who kept them in thrall. 

More likely, Lambdin painted Delia on his own initiative, and then gave the painting to his in-laws. 

I love her expression--strong, proud, unbroken. She is dressed in what were most likely her finest garments--for her this must have been an event of special meaning. My aunt and I have both tried to track down any evidence that might indicate what became of Delia, but documentary evidence is scant. What little I have gleaned indicates that she may have moved from Mount Repose across the river to New Providence Plantation, in Concordia Parish, another Bisland plantation. But no records have yet been found to shed light on her life during, or after the Civil War.

It was wonderful to once again see this woman who has been a part of our family for nearly 175 years, though not by her choice. I am delighted that she can now be viewed and appreciated by the public. I encourage all of my friends in Natchez and nearby to make the trip to the museum, perhaps in conjunction with a visit to the new Civil Rights Museum in Jackson.

Tom Scarborough lives in St. Francisville, Louisiana, where he and his wife, Denise, own and operate the Nouvelle Candle Club, and parent a precious, precocious, politically savvy  cat named Andy.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Letter from Agnes Carpenter to Elodie Rose, circa 1883

The letter has been transcribed below the photos.  Agnes Carpenter lived at Dunleith in Natchez,  but was sent to boarding school in Albany, NY.  Such a sad letter.  I remember being homesick like this.  And the school does look grim.  The school continued on as The Doane Stuart School . . . founded in 1975 as a merger between the Roman Catholic Kenwood Academy (founded by the Society of the Sacred Heart in 1852) and the Episcopal St. Agnes School (founded 1870). This unique merger is the only known merger of a Roman Catholic school and an Episcopal school in the United States.









Friday

St. Agnes
Albany
Sept 26

My dear Elodie

            It has been a long time since I received your letter — more than a week ago & I have been expecting to answer it for a long time but could not find time until today.  I have been awfully lonesome since I’ve been here & am half crazy to leave here Christmas.  If I can’t come home I believe I shall be sick just from disappointment. 

It is getting to be dreadfully cold here now, much to the girls’ displeasure as they have none of their wintry garments with them.  Has anyone heard from Alex yet?  I am willing to bet anything that he has been real homesick.  If he feels as I do I can sympathize with him.  I feel more homesick than I did last year for then it was a novelty to me but now nothing but the reality is before me.

The standard has been raised ever so high so now I can’t graduate (if I continued to come here) for perhaps five years or more. Tell Bessie to remember me to Alex when she writes to him. 

Does Juliet Rawle look the same or has she improved in her looks?  Ellen says she is rather stouter than she was when at home before. I wish you would explain to me the reason of Sophie not writing to me.  It seems rather queer in her and I don’t think I have done anything to hurt her feelings.

Emmie and Nannie have not written either since I was here last session.  I have written Carrie Dugan one letter since I have been here but she has not answered it yet.  She seems to be taking her time about it.  But I suppose the poor child is taxed with lessons.  Maybe she has changed her mind & not gone to College at all.

I have only 4 studies with ? &Miss Johnston will not allow the girls to have but 5 anyway.  At that rate it will take us an age to finish one class.  I am perfectly disgusted with girls, teachers & everything.  I want mama to take me away Christmas & put me teaching in New Orleans where I can take everything that I want & not be bothered to death with talk of unnecessary things as I am here.

Then I’d be home in case of sickness or any other emergency.  It would be perfectly heartless for them to keep me here when I dislike it so much. 

I must close now as it is time for walking & I have a letter to write to Ellen.

Answer Soon 
Your devoted friend

Agnes