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Remarkable photos of Black America 100 years ago

Leslie Leslie 16-20 minutes 1/28/2022

/ CBS NEWS

African American Woman
JHU Sheridan Libraries/Gado via Getty Images

The celebration of Black history in the U.S. has a long history itself. President Gerald Ford may be credited for officially recognizing the tradition in 1976, but a month-long celebration of Black American achievement goes back decades earlier. Black communities have held special events in February — the birth month of both Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln — since the late 19th century. 

1926 was a banner year, thanks to historian Carter G. Woodson's declaration of a Black history week. The first collegiate institution to celebrate Black History Month is thought to be Kent State University, in 1970.

Here's a look at what many facets of Black American life looked like roughly a century ago. This photo shows a woman wearing a pearl necklace and earrings, circa 1925. The image is from a collection of photo postcards from the period.

On the go

African-Americans In Car
/ Getty Images

Here, a couple poses for a photograph behind the wheel of an automobile, in a photography studio, in front of a painted backdrop.

The year: 1925.

Young flappers

Photographic Print Of 4 Women Sitting In Front Of A Sofa
Heritage Art/Heritage Images via Getty Images

These four women are quintessence of 1920s flapper chic. 

Hallmarks of the look included hair styled in soft waves, and dresses with dropped waists, kimono-style robes and sash-style fronts.

Emancipation Day parade

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Public Domain/Florida State Archives

Locals participate in an Emancipation Day parade in Lincolnville, Florida.

The undated image was taken sometime in the 1920s.

Josephine Baker — and an ostrich

Racing Ostrich
Getty Images

Here, the iconic singer and dancer Josephine Baker has harnessed an ostrich to pull a racing sulky.

The year is thought to be 1920.

Harlem parade

Jack Johnson rides in a parade
Getty Images

Seen in a pinstriped suit, former heavyweight boxing champ Jack Johnson rides in a Harlem parade. "Jack beamed upon the cheering crowd, rising now and then to acknowledge the greeting," a reporter noted.

The date: July 22, 1921.

Colorful frame

georgeeastmanwoman.jpg
George Eastman House collection/Unidentified Photographer/Public Domain

This beautiful silver gelatin print frames a woman with a laurel of sweet peas.

It's from around 1920.

Postcard photo

African American Woman Postcard
JHU Sheridan Libraries/Gado via Getty Images

This full-length portrait shows a woman seated in a wooden chair and holding a telephone, circa 1920.

The photo comes a collection of picture postcards.

On patrol

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New York Public Library/Public Domain

Two policemen walk on patrol in Harlem in New York.

The year: 1929.

International sensation

Josephine Baker
Getty Images

This portrait of American-born singer and dancer Josephine Baker features the Parisian sensation lying on a tiger rug in a silk evening gown and diamond earrings.

The photo was taken circa 1925.

Sensational Josephine

Josephine Baker
d' Ora/ullstein bild via Getty Images

Born Freda Josephine McDonald, Baker was more than just an entertainer. She was also a civil rights activist and a member of the French Resistance during World War II.

This photo was taken circa 1927.

A cook poses

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Missouri State Archives/Public Domain

A cook wearing an apron is seen outside the Eastville Cafe in the 1920s. 

The cafe was located in Callaway County, Missouri.

Taking a break

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New York Public Library/Public Domain

A butcher takes a break, looking out from a shop in the Hill District, Pittsburgh.

The year: 1929.

Tulsa Race Massacre

Tulsa Race Massacre
Getty Images

This photo, dated June 3, 1921, shows injured men being taken to a hospital by the National Guard after an attack known as the Tulsa Race Massacre

Mobs of white residents attacked Black neighbors and businesses, largely destroying the Greenwood District in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

A pioneer for children

Portrait Of Janie Porter Barrett
Interim Archives / Getty Images

Janie Porter Barrett helped establish the Virginia Industrial School for Colored Girls, a pioneering center for troubled children.

Here's a portrait of her, circa 1922.

Fashionable and full-length

Postcard of African American Woman
JHU Sheridan Libraries/Gado via Getty Images

Silhouettes of the early 1920s often carried echoes of turn-of-the-century fashion, including nipped waists.

Here is a 1920 portrait of a woman standing in front of a white wall, reading a book. It's from a collection of photo postcards.

Blues royalty

Bessie Smith
Getty Images

Blues singer Bessie Smith poses for a portrait circa 1924.

Smith was a huge figure in the American Jazz Age, earning the nickname "Empress of the Blues."

Bessie Smith

Bessie Smith
Getty Images

Here, "Empress of the Blues" Bessie Smith poses for a portrait circa 1925 in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Many of her songs dealt with social issues and themes of sexual freedom for women.

On strike

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New York Public Library/Public Domain

Black and White miners are seen together in the coal fields of Pennsylvania.

The date is thought to be 1929.

Champion in training

Jack Johnson
Getty Images

Texas-born boxer Jack Johnson is seen here in training.

Known as the "Galveston Giant," was the first Black world boxing heavyweight champion. 

A champion and defenders

Jack Johnson At The Defender Offices
Getty Images

Boxing champion Jack Johnson, third from right, stands with a group of men outside the Chicago Defender newspaper offices on Indiana Avenue in Chicago. Defender founder and publisher Robert Abbott stands farthest to the right.

The year was 1926.

Jack Johnson

Jack Johnson Picks Up Log
Getty Images

Jack Johnson picks up a log of wood. 

The photo was taken in the early 1920s.

Renaissance man

Countee Cullen
Getty Images

Born Countee LeRoy Porter, poet Countee Cullen was a key figure in the Harlem Renaissance.

Musician Duke Ellington was an admirer.

Ida B. Wells

Ida B. Wells
Chicago History Museum / Getty Images

Ida B. Wells, an investigative journalist and civil rights activist, was noted for her documentation of lynchings in the United States, among other achievements.

This photo was taken around 1920.

NAACP co-founder

James Weldon Johnson
Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images

American writer and educator James Weldon Johnson poses circa 1925. 

Johnson was one of the founders of the NAACP and served as the group's secretary from 1916-1930.

Ma Rainey in Chicago

Ma Rainey In Chicago
Michael Ochs Archives

"Mother of the Blues" Ma Rainey poses with her band, the Rabbit Foot Minstrels. 

The year: 1923.

Women at work

dollfactorynypl.jpg
New York Public Library/Public Domain

Women work at a doll factory that produced toys for children of color.

The factory was in Harlem; the photo was taken in 1929.

NAACP leaders

NAACP 20th Annual Session
VCG Wilson/Corbis via Getty Images

Members of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) pose at the organization's 20th annual session in Cleveland, Ohio, on June 26, 1929. 

Pictured are NAACP staff, including W.E.B. DuBois, James Weldon Johnson, Walter White, William Pickens, Arthur Spingarn, Daisy Lampkin and Robert Bagnall. 

Portrait of a poet

Portrait Of Alice Dunbar-Nelson
Getty Images

This is a portrait of American poet, activist and journalist Alice Dunbar-Nelson. The image appears in Robert Thomas Kerlin's book collection of poems.

The year: 1923

Inventing in 1920

Washington Carver
Getty Images

Here, American educator and scientist George Washington Carver, born to enslaved parents in Missouri, is seen at work, circa 1920.

He joined the staff of the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama and became one of the nation's most prominent agricultural scientists.

Portrait a playwright

Portrait Of Angelina Weld Grimké
Getty Images

This is a portrait of American journalist, teacher, playwright and poet Angelina Weld Grimke

The image appears in Robert Thomas Kerlin's book of collected poems, 1923.

Piano man

Portrait Of James P Johnson
Gilles Petard/Redferns/Getty

This is a studio portrait of American Jazz musician James P. Johnson. Johnson was considered a pioneer of a popular music style known as stride piano.

The year: 1921.

A king and his band

Portrait Of King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band
JP Jazz Archive/Redferns/Getty

This lively portrait captures the showmanship of King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band as they pose for a studio group shot in early 1920s. 

Pictured from left: Honore Dutrey on trombone, Baby Dodds on drums, King Oliver on trumpet, Louis Armstrong on trombone, Lil Hardin (later Armstrong), on piano, Willian "Bill" Johnson on banjo, and Johnny Dodds on clarinet. 

A lady with style

Postcard of an African American Woman
JHU Sheridan Libraries/Gado via Getty Images

This is a portrait a woman wearing a statement hat, circa 1920. 

It's from a collection of photo postcards.

Pre-flapper fashion

Postcard of an African American Woman
JHU Sheridan Libraries/Gado via Getty Images

This woman wears a long skirt and a tucked-in top, plus a large tie, circa 1920. 

It's from a collection of photo postcards.

Walking away

Tulsa Race Massacre
Getty Images

A Black couple walks across a street with smoke rising in the distance after the Tulsa Race Massacre, in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

The handwritten caption on the photo says "Tulsa riot" along with the date June 1, 1921.

Aftermath

Tulsa Race Massacre
Getty Images

A group of National Guard troops, carrying rifles with bayonets attached, escort unarmed Black men to a detention center at Convention Hall, after the Tulsa Race Massacre in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

The photo is from June 1921.

A distinguished honor

Winners of Harmon Award
Bettmann/Getty Images

The Harmon Award was established in 1926 to honor Black achievement in literature, music, fine arts, business and industry.

Here, Miss Harmon, daughter of the founder, congratulates winners at the Zion church in 1928. Collecting awards are (left to right) Nella Larsen Imes, a novelist; activist Channing H. Tobias; and James Weldon Johnson, accepting the award on behalf of poet Claude McKay.

At far right is Dr. George Haynes, secretary of the committee on race relations. 

Segregation in effect

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New York Public Library/Public Domain

This is a "Jim Crow" car on a train in Fayetteville, North Carolina.

The year was circa 1929.

Detained in Tulsa

Woman During Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921
© CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images

Black Americans are detained during the Tulsa Race Massacre in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in June 1921.

Here, a woman sits in the back of a truck, her legs hanging over the edge; a man holding a rifle sits on the running board.

A Harlem club

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New York Public Domain/Public Domain

"The only true African organization of its kind," boasts this sign outside of a Harlem club.

The year is thought to be 1929.

Labor meeting

American Negro Labor Congress is seen here holding a meeting
New York Public Library/Public Domain

Founded by the Communist Party in 1925, the American Negro Labor Congress is seen here holding a meeting.

The photo is thought to come from the year 1929.

A woman and her plane

bessie-coleman-and-her-plane-1922.jpg
Public Domain

Bessie Coleman was the first Black woman, and the first Native American, to hold a pilot license.

Here, she poses with her plane in 1922.

Homecoming

Cigarette Table At Dinner For Infantry
Bettmann/Getty

Here is a Black soldier from the 369th Infantry Regiment, collecting cigarettes after a chicken dinner at the 71st Regiment Armory in Manhattan.

The picture was taken in February 1919.

Well-earned nicknames

The Arrival Of 369Th Regiment Nyc
Bettmann/Getty

The 369th Black infantry regiment, seen here arriving in New York after World War I, was nicknamed the Harlem Hellfighters.

The French honored them with another nickname after witnessing their bravery: Men of Bronze.

An important bank

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Public Domain/New York Public Library

This image from 1925 depicts the Binga State Bank.

It was founded by Joseph Binga, Chicago's first Black banker.