Last updated: March 19, 2025
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Portrait of Absalom Jones, 1810

Delaware Art Museum, Gift of Absalom Jones School, 1971.
Title: Portrait of Absalom Jones, 1810
Date: 1810
Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Object Information: Oil on paper mounted to board, 30 x 25 inches.
Repository: Delaware Art Museum.
Description:
This half-length portrait of the Reverend Absalom Jones depicts a man of dignity in his ecclesiastical robes, with Bible in hand. Born enslaved in 1746 and manumitted in 1784, the Reverend Jones co-founded the Free African Society and the African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas. Bishop William White ordained Absalom Jones a deacon in 1795 and a priest in 1802. The portrait was painted by Raphaelle Peale, son of the prominent Philadelphia artist Charles Willson Peale.
Date: 1810
Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Object Information: Oil on paper mounted to board, 30 x 25 inches.
Repository: Delaware Art Museum.
Description:
This half-length portrait of the Reverend Absalom Jones depicts a man of dignity in his ecclesiastical robes, with Bible in hand. Born enslaved in 1746 and manumitted in 1784, the Reverend Jones co-founded the Free African Society and the African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas. Bishop William White ordained Absalom Jones a deacon in 1795 and a priest in 1802. The portrait was painted by Raphaelle Peale, son of the prominent Philadelphia artist Charles Willson Peale.
Tags
- independence national historical park
- invisible architects
- african american history
- black history
- antebellum era
- historic philadelphia
- absalom jones
- african episcopal church of st. thomas
- american art history
- portraits
- african american
- civil rights
- primary source
- abolitionist
- abolition
- christianity
- enslavement
- painting
- spirituality