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Progress of the Race, Tuskegee University, Tuskegee, Ala 1930 — a documentary photograph from Booker T. Washington's institute, where vocational classrooms and brick-laid quadrangles were offered as evidence that Black American advancement could be measured, catalogued, and answered to a doubting century.
Bella Frye sources artifacts from the great American historical archive — the Library of Congress, the National Archives, regional historical societies, and the lithographic publishers (Currier & Ives, Kurz & Allison, Endicott, Sarony, Prang) who documented the republic from its founding through the early twentieth century. The aged paper tone, the engraver's hand, and the original plate annotations are preserved in the print.
Printed to order in our Pacific Northwest studio on premium 380gsm cotton canvas with archival pigment inks. Hand-finished and framed in our signature ornate frame with verdigris corner detail, available in three finishes:
Stretched canvas (frameless gallery wrap) is available for those who prefer a frameless presentation.
Libraries, studies, veterans' rooms, and any space that remembers the republic's first turn at world war. Pairs naturally with other documents from the Bella Frye Republic collection — political broadsides, presidential portraits, military scenes, and the artifacts of American memory.
Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 10 - Jul 15
US$40
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