Image Not Available for Tintype
Tintype
Image Not Available for Tintype

Tintype

Object number2016.67.1 a,b
Date1870
MediumTin; Metal; Wood; Leather; Glass; Velvet
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
DescriptionEncased tintype of seated African American man dressed in a suit and hat, with a Dalmation dog lying by his feet.Dimensions(a,b together) Height 4.688, Width 3.813, Depth 0.75;
(a) Height 4.688, Width 3.813, Depth 0.5;
(b) Height 4.688, Width 3.813, Depth 0.313.
Historical NotesBenjamin Tucker Tanner was one of twelve children born to free Black parents from Pittsburgh. He attended Avery College, Western Theological Seminary, and Wilberforce where he was made a Doctor of Divinity. In 1862, he took over the 15th Street AME Church in Washington, D.C., and following the war, established the nation's first school for freedmen located in the U.S. Navy Yard in Washington. In 1868, Tanner was elected Secretary of the AME General Conference and named editor of its publication, The Christian Recorder, which soon became the largest black-owned periodical in the nation. In 1884, Turner became the editor of a new AME newspaper, AME Church Review. Four years later he was elected a bishop of the AME Church. Tanner wrote a number of books including "An Apology for African Methodism" (1867) which was highly regarded among contemporary American scholars of religion, and "Outline and Government of the AME Church" (1883). The gentleman shown in the present photograph is shown reading a newspaper, an appropriate view given who Tanner was. An image of Tanner appears in Garland Penn's definitive Afro-American Press and its Editors, page 121.
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