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Editors Note: A copy of the documentary
is available for your review. Contact Elizabeth Smith for more information.
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| Tuskegee photographer P.H. Polk
created a remarkable record of African American life in Alabama's
Black Belt. |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - P.H. Polks rich photographic record of
African American life in Alabama is examined in Moments
of Dignity, a University of Alabama-produced television
documentary that airs on Alabama Public Television at 10 p.m., Monday,
June 10, 2002.
Polk took pictures of all sorts of African Americans in Alabama
-- from tenant farmers in tattered overalls to polished and starched
members of the emerging black middle class posed for a family portrait.
His granddaughter, Anoa Monsho, narrates the documentary. My
grandfathers pictures captured the essence of historic Tuskegee
and the changing face of America, she says. And within
his images you will find the hopes and dreams, the joys and sorrows
of middle class and poverty-stricken African Americans -- people
struggling to find their place in the rural South.
Polk was born in Bessemer in 1898 and was a gifted musician as
well as an artist. He was one of the first graduates of the photography
department of Tuskegee Institute.
After graduation he worked in the Mobile shipyards and then moved
to Chicago where he painted Pullman railway cars. On the weekends,
he went door-to-door taking family photographs. In 1928 he returned
to Tuskegee to become a faculty member in the photography division
of the Tuskegee Institute, located in Tuskegee, and opened a photography
studio. After a brief stint in Atlanta in late 1938 and early 1939,
Polk moved back to Tuskegee and in 1939 became Tuskegee Institutes
official photographer. He kept that position until the time of his
death in 1984.
Moments of Dignity was produced by Dwight Cammeron
for The University of Alabama Center
for Public Television and Radio.
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