Three women in Marshall, Texas, USA, 1899. Photograph by Gabriele Munte.

An observation: At first, from faraway I thought they were twins but if we look closer, the two women on the right look like mother and daughter. Their clothing is exactly alike.

#BlackMastodon #BlackTwitter BlackAndWhite #Photography #BlackHistory #histodons #History #Texas

@Deglassco What a beautiful shot - at a time when there were no handheld cameras.
@Deglassco the women are beautiful- the leering on the edges of the photo is what caught my eye though…
@Champagne yes, that was interesting. I can’t decipher whether he is a boy or a man.
@Deglassco it’s not just the one though. The woman behind him is also staring, as are the people in the carriage on the left.
@Champagne The most charitable interpretation is that they’re amazed by the finery of the ladies’ dresses. But considering the times, their gazes might be more malevolent.
@Deglassco Yes, the latter is my interpretation - hence, my use "leering". I suppose it is projection... but, it's how it spoke to me.

@Deglassco @Champagne
Wearing knickerbockers in that era would be more likely be a teenager. The young woman behind him looks teenaged, also.

The prominent woman on the left has sort of a "What are you doing and why are we doing this?" expression on her face-- rather disapproving. Maybe she's the mother and doesn't approve of her girls posing shamelessly for strange men with cameras, encouraging strangers to STARE at them.

(Oh, my! Scandalous! It was probably considered to be very unladylike at that time, I would imagine. Studio photographers were reputable, but street photographers would have been associated with carnivals and hucksters.)

Do you know their names at all? Even just a family surname?

https://diggingintoyourfamilytree.wordpress.com/2020/08/18/whos-in-that-photo-identifying-ancestors-and-dating-old-photos/

Who’s in That Photo? – Identifying Ancestors and Dating Old Photos

Even if you have no idea of which family line the photo comes from, you can often deduce what year the photo was taken; and by extension, who is in the photo… with just a little help from Goo…

Digging into Your Family Tree
@AnneTheWriter1 No, and I looked all over through image searches.

@Deglassco
I *think* the young ladies *might* be holding appointment books. That could mean they were in the higher sections of their economic social group, going out to meet up with people at their homes (Victorian visiting ettiquette).

The fans hanging off their dresses indicates they were socializing at the time, interacting with people in a respectable scenario, probably young men. A lady would especially use the fan as a way to flirt.😉

Perhaps they were out meeting portential husbands? Mom was likely the disapproving Chaperone here, based on her expression. (NO proper lady would go visiting men alone.)

Interestingly, some quick research shows that in that year, the town was home to TWO #HBCUs -- Wiley University & Bishop College (latter now in Dallas). Perhaps their College Historians might be interested to have a look?

But this college info also indicates the presence of an economic high society among the Black community there at the time.

https://ntsusa.org/fan-victorian-flirting/

@AnneTheWriter1 Thank you so much for your informative analysis. I wish I knew more about the photo’s origins.
@Deglassco I want to live in a world where our children or grandchildren don't understand why you tweeted this. These ladies deserved respect then, and their memory deserves our respect now.
@ddgulledge I agree. Or we post it and look at it only from an aesthetic perspective.
@Deglassco well aren’t they dressed all fancy. In those days a lady didn’t leave even to go shopping without dressing in her nicest day clothes
@carowe It seems to have been a special occasion.
@Deglassco such beautiful ladies .. looking smart and confident.. bet they pissed off some white folks acting like they had the right to be carefree on the sidewalk like that .. thanks for this great picture of real history