Last updated: October 31, 2024
Article
Portrait of James Forten, 1818
Title: Portrait of James Forten, 1818
Date: 1818
Location: 336 Lombard Street (formerly 92 Lombard Street), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Object Information: Watercolor on paper
Repository: Historical Society of Philadelphia Digital Library | Leon Gardiner Collection of American Negro Historical Society Records | #151.
Description:
This is a watercolor portrait of James Forten painted around 1818. By this time, Forten was a father, prominent businessman, and community leader fighting for many social issues including the abolition of slavery. Alongside Absalom Jones, in 1794, he helped establish the African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas and several schools for Black American children and adults. When the American Anti-Slavery Society meeting convened at Forten’s house in 1833, invitees included founders Robert Purvis, who had married Forten’s daughter Harriet, and William Lloyd Garrison, who, with Forten’s support, published The Liberator newspaper. Also in 1833, Forten's wife, Charlotte Vandine, and his daughters, Margaretta, Harriet, and Sarah were also among the founders of the interracial Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society.
Date: 1818
Location: 336 Lombard Street (formerly 92 Lombard Street), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Object Information: Watercolor on paper
Repository: Historical Society of Philadelphia Digital Library | Leon Gardiner Collection of American Negro Historical Society Records | #151.
Description:
This is a watercolor portrait of James Forten painted around 1818. By this time, Forten was a father, prominent businessman, and community leader fighting for many social issues including the abolition of slavery. Alongside Absalom Jones, in 1794, he helped establish the African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas and several schools for Black American children and adults. When the American Anti-Slavery Society meeting convened at Forten’s house in 1833, invitees included founders Robert Purvis, who had married Forten’s daughter Harriet, and William Lloyd Garrison, who, with Forten’s support, published The Liberator newspaper. Also in 1833, Forten's wife, Charlotte Vandine, and his daughters, Margaretta, Harriet, and Sarah were also among the founders of the interracial Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society.