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March, 2011

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Handsome Devils, or, Whiskers and the Men Who Wore Them

As we on the CLIR survey team have discovered in the hundreds of photographs we have encountered since beginning our work last April, the gentlemen and ladies who strolled the streets of 19th-century Brooklyn took great care to stay up on the hottest fashions of the day.  For the gents, this often involved the sporting of some truly impressive and daring facial hair styles.  I thought I might take this opportunity to share but a modest sampling of the mustaches, beards, and sideburns that have evoked our admiration and/or bewilderment.  Let these photographs be a testament to the hidden power waiting to be unleashed on the faces of 21st-century Brooklynites who dare to call themselves gentlemen…

Possibly the Reverend Theodore Russell Ludlow.  V1991.75.47, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Possibly the Reverend Theodore Russell Ludlow. V1991.75.47, Brooklyn Historical Society.

H. Walker. Prohibition Collection, 1977.127, Brooklyn Historical Society.

H. Walker. Brooklyn Prohibition Collection, 1977.127, Brooklyn Historical Society.

James Watt.  James Watt family papers, ARC.103, Brooklyn Historical Society.

James Watt. James Watt family papers, ARC.103, Brooklyn Historical Society.

S.C. Barnes.  Rev. Edwin Warriner papers, 1977.255, Brooklyn Historical Society.

S.C. Barnes. Rev. Edwin Warriner papers, 1977.255, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Unidentified Individual.  Old First Class of Wilson Street School records, ARC.107, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Unidentified Individual. Old First Class of Wilson Street School records, ARC.107, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Unidentified Individual.  Charles Stuart Booth family papers, ARC.154, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Unidentified Individual. Charles Stuart Booth family papers, ARC.154, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Unidentified Individual.  Brooklyn Prohibition collection, 1977.127, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Unidentified Individual. Brooklyn Prohibition collection, 1977.127, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Unidentified Individual.  Charles Stuart Booth family papers, ARC.154, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Unidentified Individual. Charles Stuart Booth family papers, ARC.154, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Silas B. Dutcher, eminent Brooklyn businessman and public officer.  Silas B. Dutcher family papers, 1977.282, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Silas B. Dutcher, eminent Brooklyn businessman and public officer. Silas B. Dutcher family papers, 1977.282, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Dutcher, younger and less inhibited.  Silas B. Dutcher family papers, 1977.282, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Dutcher, younger and less inhibited. Silas B. Dutcher family papers, 1977.282, Brooklyn Historical Society.

Brooklyn History Photo of the Week: Richetta Randolph Wallace

Richetta Randolph Wallace

From Brooklyn Historical Society Collection, Richetta Randolph Wallace Papers, ArMs 1978.137.

Richetta Randolph Wallace, circa 1930. Ms. Randolph is an inspiring figure in Brooklyn and national history. Known by her maiden name after her husband’s early death, Ms. Randolph was private secretary to the social activist Mary White Ovington in the first decade of the twentieth century, leading to a position as the first member of the administrative staff for the new National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Ms. Randolph later became the NAACP’s office manager and was private secretary to NAACP officers James Weldon Johnson and Walter White, among other important positions until her retirement in 1946. After retiring, she continued to take leadership roles as a congregant and officer at the Mt. Olivet Baptist Church in Manhattan. Born in Virginia in 1884, Ms. Randolph spent her early years in New Jersey and Manhattan before moving to Brooklyn in 1933, living at 251 Decatur St. in Bedford-Stuyvesant until her death in 1971.

Want to know more about Ms. Randolph and other important figures in African American History? BHS recently released its Guide to African-American History Archival Material at Othmer Library on Emma, the library’s catablog. Subject guides help researchers navigate BHS’ extensive holdings when looking for material on particular topics (in this case African-American history). To read more about the Richetta Randolph Wallace papers click here.

Each Thursday BHS emails a photograph of the week exclusively to our eNews subscribers. These images are culled from our collection of more than 50,000 photographs of Brooklyn and the New York City area. The photographs are also tweeted by BHS and displayed on our blog in a running series.