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50 Years/50 Collections: Prosper L. Flint collection
The Amistad Research Center has a rich holding of photographs that provides a glimpse into African American life throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. The Prosper L. Flint collection is one that presents the pictorial history of African Americans. Prosper L. Flint donated the collection to the Center in 1994. An aura of mystery surrounds majority of the unidentified individuals within the images. All of them were more than likely members or friends of the Flint and Armant families of New Orleans. The Flints and Armants were Creoles and this collection provides a visual representation of Creole life in the city. The photographs are also undated, but by analyzing the dress of the individuals as well as the photograph type, the collection has been dated between the 1880s and 1910s. Some of the photographs are studio portraits and some were posed shots in front of homes.
While one can only speculate about the lives and identities of the people in the collection, there is more information available about Prosper L. Flint, the donor of the photographs. Prosper L. Flint Sr. was born in 1906 in Louisiana, most likely in New Orleans. He lived in the 7th ward, the historic Creole district of New Orleans, with his wife, Armantine (neé Hubbard). The couple had three sons, Prosper Jr., Eddie, and Alvin. Prosper Jr. was born in 1929, Eddie was born in 1931, and Alvin was born in 1933. According to 1940 U.S. census records, Flint worked as a laborer in a country club, while his wife was a seamstress.
Flint Sr.’s mother-in-law, Eugenia Hubbard, came to live with the family upon the death of her husband, Joseph. Armantine Armant was the mother of Eugenia Hubbard, and some of the photographs feature members of the Armant family. Armantine Armant and the Hubbard family were marked as mulatto on the 1920 census, and they most likely identified as Creole. Flint Sr. died in 1987. His son, Prosper L. Flint, Jr., died on August 29, 2005 during Hurricane Katrina.
Image from the Prosper L. Flint collection. Images from the Amistad’s website, newsletters, and blogs cannot be reproduced without permission.
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Hambrick is a Public Historian with a passion for collecting, preserving and interpreting history for diverse audiences. Her thirty-one-year career as a museum professional includes expertise in program development, interpretative planning, curation, grant writing, fundraising, and board governance. She led the effort to preserve three slave cemeteries and six historic buildings in Ascension Parish.
She is considered an expert on the history and culture of African Americans in communities along the Mississippi River. Kathe Hambrick’s interviews include local, national, and international media, the BBC Learning Channel, CBS Morning News, National Public Radio, and the New York Times. The consulting firm, 2PRESERVE was established by Hambrick in 2021 to provide cultural resources and guidance to corporations, museums, cultural centers, government agencies, and faith-based organizations.
Throughout her 31-year career, Kathe has curated over one hundred exhibits, including The Rural Roots of Jazz, African Influences on Louisiana Cuisine, Creole Du Monde, and The Square Collection which featured original art by Elizabeth Catlett, Jacob Lawrence, Richmond Barthé, and Tina Allen. Her most recent exhibit is the GU272 of Ascension: The Jesuit and Episcopal Connection to Slavery.
Kathe is the author and co-author of several books:
Hambrick is a Public Historian with a passion for collecting, preserving and interpreting history for diverse audiences. Her thirty-one-year career as a museum professional includes expertise in program development, interpretative planning, curation, grant writing, fundraising, and board governance. She led the effort to preserve three slave cemeteries and six historic buildings in Ascension Parish.
She is considered an expert on the history and culture of African Americans in communities along the Mississippi River. Kathe Hambrick’s interviews include local, national, and international media, the BBC Learning Channel, CBS Morning News, National Public Radio, and the New York Times. The consulting firm, 2PRESERVE was established by Hambrick in 2021 to provide cultural resources and guidance to corporations, museums, cultural centers, government agencies, and faith-based organizations.
Throughout her 31-year career, Kathe has curated over one hundred exhibits, including The Rural Roots of Jazz, African Influences on Louisiana Cuisine, Creole Du Monde, and The Square Collection which featured original art by Elizabeth Catlett, Jacob Lawrence, Richmond Barthé, and Tina Allen. Her most recent exhibit is the GU272 of Ascension: The Jesuit and Episcopal Connection to Slavery.
Kathe is the author and co-author of several books:
Hambrick is a Public Historian with a passion for collecting, preserving and interpreting history for diverse audiences. Her thirty-one-year career as a museum professional includes expertise in program development, interpretative planning, curation, grant writing, fundraising, and board governance. She led the effort to preserve three slave cemeteries and six historic buildings in Ascension Parish.
She is considered an expert on the history and culture of African Americans in communities along the Mississippi River. Kathe Hambrick’s interviews include local, national, and international media, the BBC Learning Channel, CBS Morning News, National Public Radio, and the New York Times. The consulting firm, 2PRESERVE was established by Hambrick in 2021 to provide cultural resources and guidance to corporations, museums, cultural centers, government agencies, and faith-based organizations.
Throughout her 31-year career, Kathe has curated over one hundred exhibits, including The Rural Roots of Jazz, African Influences on Louisiana Cuisine, Creole Du Monde, and The Square Collection which featured original art by Elizabeth Catlett, Jacob Lawrence, Richmond Barthé, and Tina Allen. Her most recent exhibit is the GU272 of Ascension: The Jesuit and Episcopal Connection to Slavery.
Kathe is the author and co-author of several books: