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Two
children and an adult pose for an unknown photographer in the old fuzzy image
at left. It's bluish tine defines it as a cyanotype, from an
image-making technique popular with amateur photographers in the middle of the
nineteenth century. This image, from the Handley Library in Winchester,
Virginia, was taken on the Miller Plantation in Winchester in 1845.
Although the adult is not identified, the two children are: Katie Miller
is on the left, and Mary Johnson is on the right. Katie Miller is a
daughter of the wealthy Miller family, who have just received a gift in the
form of five-year-old slave Mary Johnson, as a Christmas present--possibly the
occasion for this picture.1
Mary E. Johnson was born in
Clarke County, Virginia on or about November 12, 1839. After the tumult
of the Civil War she married widower Thomas W. Moss, a veteran of the 35th
USCT, a Union regiment organized in the summer of 1863 as the First North
Carolina Colored Volunteers. The unit was mostly composed of men who had
been slaves in North Carolina and Virginia.2
The Moss family lived in
Winchester, and on March 7, 1878, she gave birth to their second child,
Charles Franklin. The young man must have shown an aptitude for
art, because he held apprenticeships in Providence and Newport, Rhode Island,
according to the Cumberland County 2000 Arts and Cultural Directory.
"After this he studied at the Cooper Union School of Fine Arts, NYC and
the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts,"3 where, according to
family lore, he met and studied with fellow student Henry Ossawa Tanner.
Locally, Charles Franklin Moss
came to Harrisburg, probably sometime after 1907. He brought his growing
family, consisting of his wife Sarah Virginia Townson, whom he married in
Winchester about 1898, and five children, to Central Pennsylvania, settling
first in the capital city. Having an interest in photography, he opened a
studio on Market Street in the city, where he practiced his trade for a short
while. A daughter, Ruth Moss-Green, states that a number of white
photographers in Harrisburg learned the trade from Moss. It is not known
how long Charles F. Moss kept his business in Harrisburg, but at some point he
moved his family to Carlisle, in Cumberland County.4, 5
Moss
continued to practice his photography trade in Carlisle, eventually
establishing a studio on North Pitt Street.
In 1914 he became the first African American member of the National
Association of Professional Photographers. A surviving photograph that
Moss took of the Shiloh Baptist Sabbath School in Carlisle is dated 1919,
showing that Moss kept his business in that place at least through that
year. His youngest child, Helena, was born in 1920 in Carlisle. Of
twelve children born to Charles and Sarah Moss, seven would be born in
Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, between the years 1911 and 1920.6
Carlisle historian Ruth Hodge,
who is actively researching Charles Franklin Moss, Sr., notes that Moss moved
to Pittsburgh sometime in the 1920's. He eventually returned to his
roots in Winchester, where he died in 1961.7
The painting shown at right,
above, is owned by descendants of Charles F. Moss, Sr., and was photographed
by Sheila Green-Stevenson for this article. It is signed at the bottom
edge, where the road meets the edge of the canvas: "Chas. F. Moss,
Sr./ 1933." Click the thumbnail image for a larger image.
Sources:
- Correspondence,
Sheila Green-Stevenson to Afrolumens, October 13, 17, 19, 2003.
- "First North Carolina Colored Infantry," Internet site, accessed December 12, 2003.
http://extlab1.entnem.ufl.edu/olustee/35th_USCI.html;
"Our Virginia, D.C., Pennsylvania, New Jersey Genealogies,"
Internet site, accessed December 14, 2003. http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=fox2&id=I31955.
- 250 Years of the Arts: Arts and Cultural Directory for Cumberland
County, 2000, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania 250th Anniversary
publication. Carlisle, Pennsylvania, pages 9-10. A photograph of
Charles Franklin Moss, Sr. as a young man is included on page 9 of this
publication.
- "Our Virginia, D.C., Pennsylvania, New Jersey Genealogies"
- The statement by Ruth Moss-Green is from an interview conducted by Sheila
Green-Stevenson recently, and is contained in a letter from Sheila
Green-Stevenson to Afrolumens Project, September 25, 2003.
- 250 Years of the Arts: Arts and Cultural Directory for Cumberland
County, p. 10; "Woman tells lensman's story," Elizabeth
Gibson, Carlisle Patriot-News edition of the Harrisburg Sunday
Patriot-News, December 2, 2001, p. AA1, AA3. This newspaper
article includes the photograph of the Shiloh Baptist Sabbath School, taken
by Moss in 1919.
- "Woman tells lensman's story;" "Our Virginia, D.C.,
Pennsylvania, New Jersey Genealogies."
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