Berea, Unknown before 1931, The Doris Ulmann photograph collection casts a wide net across fields throughout the humanities and represent important primary source material for historical and ethnographic studies of Appalachian and Gullah culture as well the subject of folk arts and craft traditions.
Unknown before 1931, Out, The Doris Ulmann photograph collection casts a wide net across fields throughout the humanities and represent important primary source material for historical and ethnographic studies of Appalachian and Gullah culture as well the subject of folk arts and craft traditions.
Sitter. The Rev. Robert Grosvenor Hutchins came to Berea in 1919 with his second wife, Mary Pierson Hutchins. She taught violin at Berea College from 1921 to 1936. She died in April 1941 in Claremont, CA., The Doris Ulmann photograph collection casts a wide net across fields throughout the humanities and represent important primary source material for historical and ethnographic studies of Appalachian and Gullah culture as well the subject of folk arts and craft traditions.
The Rev. Robert Grosvenor Hutchins came to Berea in 1919 with his second wife, Mary Pierson Hutchins. She taught violin at Berea College from 1921 to 1936. She died in April 1941 in Claremont, CA., The Doris Ulmann photograph collection casts a wide net across fields throughout the humanities and represent important primary source material for historical and ethnographic studies of Appalachian and Gullah culture as well the subject of folk arts and craft traditions.
Photograph from the Doris Ulmann collection, The Doris Ulmann photograph collection casts a wide net across fields throughout the humanities and represent important primary source material for historical and ethnographic studies of Appalachian and Gullah culture as well the subject of folk arts and craft traditions.
The Rev. Robert Grosvenor Hutchins came to Berea in 1919 with his second wife, Mary Pierson Hutchins. She taught violin at Berea College from 1921 to 1936. She died in April 1941 in Claremont, CA., The Doris Ulmann photograph collection casts a wide net across fields throughout the humanities and represent important primary source material for historical and ethnographic studies of Appalachian and Gullah culture as well the subject of folk arts and craft traditions.
The Rev. Robert Grosvenor Hutchins came to Berea in 1919 with his second wife, Mary Pierson Hutchins. She taught violin at Berea College from 1921 to 1936. She died in April 1941 in Claremont, CA., The Doris Ulmann photograph collection casts a wide net across fields throughout the humanities and represent important primary source material for historical and ethnographic studies of Appalachian and Gullah culture as well the subject of folk arts and craft traditions.
The Rev. Robert Grosvenor Hutchins came to Berea in 1919 with his second wife, Mary Pierson Hutchins. She taught violin at Berea College from 1921 to 1936. She died in April 1941 in Claremont, CA., The Doris Ulmann photograph collection casts a wide net across fields throughout the humanities and represent important primary source material for historical and ethnographic studies of Appalachian and Gullah culture as well the subject of folk arts and craft traditions.
Berea The Rev. Robert Grosvenor Hutchins came to Berea in 1919 with his second wife, Mary Pierson Hutchins. She taught violin at Berea College from 1921 to 1936. She died in April 1941 in Claremont, CA., The Doris Ulmann photograph collection casts a wide net across fields throughout the humanities and represent important primary source material for historical and ethnographic studies of Appalachian and Gullah culture as well the subject of folk arts and craft traditions.
The Doris Ulmann photograph collection casts a wide net across fields throughout the humanities and represent important primary source material for historical and ethnographic studies of Appalachian and Gullah culture as well the subject of folk arts and craft traditions.