It was just a simple family photograph from 1872, but take a closer look at the sister’s hand.

It was just a simple family photograph from 1872, but take a closer look at the sister’s hand.

Later, official documents mention a medical examination that revealed Ruth suffered lasting physical consequences and severe nervous sensitivity. Despite this violent past, the records show a slow recovery: James became a laborer and later a landowner, Mary worked tirelessly, and the children learned to read.

Decades later, Ruth wrote a few moving lines about her childhood and the photo shoot in a family Bible preserved by her descendants: Her father had insisted that they all be present and clearly visible because “this picture would last longer than their voices.”

When an anonymous family became a symbol:
Thanks to Sarah’s work and the testimony of a descendant of Ruth, the photograph finally emerges from anonymity. It becomes the centerpiece of the exhibition “The Washington Family: Survival, Reconstruction, Transmission,” a true collective African American memory.

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