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America's
Court Photographer ~
Frances Benjamin Johnston (1864-1962)
was an early photo-journalist and a noted
freelance photographer. Johnstons
documentary work was exemplary and included
a renowned series of photographs commissioned
by Booker T. Washington for the Hampton
Institute in 1899 and the Tuskegee Institute
in 1906. However, she also made her mark
as portrait photographer. From the late
1880s to the 1910s, Johnston captured
remarkable images of the White House that
document the lifestyles of the first families,
workers, and visitors as well as its architectural
design in that period. Johnston studied
art in Paris and Washington and through
family connections met the elite of Washington
society and gained access to the first
family. With this opportunity and hard
work, Johnston established a business
as a professional portrait photographer
and moved into the field of photo-journalism,
working freelance for numerous magazines
and illustrated journals. In the early
1910s, Johnston began to specialize in
architectural photography. The culmination
of her career as an architectural photographer
came with the Carnegie Corporations
support of a survey of the early buildings
and estates of nine southern states. The
Library of Congress holds her papers and
the bulk of her photographs.
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