Subject for Reconstruction, 1866-1868

THF278892 / Subject for Reconstruction, 1866-1868
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Artifact Overview

This ramshackle building housed freed people in Florida. The man and child sitting on the front step likely called it home. They raised chickens and protected them in a triangle coop in the yard and in nesting boxes on stilts under the shade tree (perhaps an orange tree). They faced an uncertain future as the national government sought equality while others opposed rights expansion for freedmen.

Artifact Details

Artifact

Stereograph

Date Made

1866-1868

Subject Date

1866-1868

Location

By Request in the Benson Ford Research Center

Object ID

2020.0.1.24

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Material

Paper (Fiber product)
Card stock

Technique

Gelatin silver process
Printing (Process)

Color

Black-and-white (Colors)

Dimensions

Height: 3 in
Width: 6.75 in

Inscriptions

front, left side: A.F. Styles, Burlington, V.T. front, bottom left side: 635. Subject for Reconstruction front, right side: SCENES IN FLORIDA
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Related Content

  • “The Freedmen’s Bureau,” illustration from Harper’s Weekly, July 25, 1868.
    article

    Freedmen’s Bureau: Exercising Citizenship

      President Abraham Lincoln signed The Freedmen’s Bureau Act on March 3, 1865, to provide food, clothing, fuel, and temporary shelter to freedmen, their wives, and children in areas of insurrection (in other words, within the Confederate States).