Solving the mystery of faces in decades-old photos

SALISBURY — An exhibit from Salisbury School, “Black History in Rural Connecticut,” opened Saturday, April 21, at the Salisbury Association’s Academy building on Main Street in Salisbury.

Salisbury School music teacher Peter McEachern designed the course after finding a cache of photos in his home, the former Fowlkes house, dating back to the 1930s. 

“The Fowlkes family was one of several black families who made a life here in this small mostly white rural Connecticut town,” said McEachern. “In the course, we are working to identify people and places in the photos and to learn their stories as well as the broader history of the area’s black residents.” 

 Bryce Daley, a senior from Pittsfield, Mass., was the only student in the class who was able to be at the exhibit opening. (The other boys all had athletic events.)

He said he helped with sorting the photographs and with the laborious process of identifying the people in them.

“We did a lot of calling, and we still didn’t get everybody.” The students also tried using the www.ancestry.com website.

Daley helped pick out the jazz and blues music that accompanied the exhibit.

He said he signed up for the class because he lives nearby “and I thought it would be interesting.”

And since Black History in Rural Connecticut was a new course, “I thought it would be cool to be one of the first guys to take it.”

The exhibit will be up through May 31.

For more information on Salisbury Association, go to www.salisburyassn.org or The Salisbury Association on Facebook.  

 

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