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So. Carolina, #377
So. Carolina, #377

So. Carolina, #377

Date1908
Maker Lewis Hine American, 1874-1940
Label TextLewis Hine took photographs to promote social reform. On behalf of the National Child Labor Committee, he set out to document conditions for young children working in various agricultural and industrial operations. To gain entry into these mills, he invented guises and posed as a fire inspector, post card vendor, Bible salesman, and impoverished schoolteacher. In his photographs, children tend to look out from their surroundings with tough expressions, steeling themselves against what Hine called "the vicious circle of poverty that awaits them."
Object number87.76
Exhibition HistorySeattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, "Order and Border", February 26, 2010 - August 28, 2011
Credit LineGift of Chuck Kuhn
Dimensions4 5/8 x 6 7/16 in. (11.8 x 16.4 cm)
MediumGelatin silver print
So. Carolina, #371
Lewis Hine
1908
Object number: 87.77
Untitled
Lewis Hine
ca. 1909
Object number: 83.48
Boys in a Textile Mill
Lewis Hine
1911
Object number: 82.194
Tennessee, 1910
Lewis Hine
1910
Object number: 87.70
Knitter in Hoisery Mill, Alabama
Lewis Hine
1914
Object number: 87.71
Crochet, #3126
Lewis Hine
1874-1940
Object number: 87.73
West Virginia, #143
Lewis Hine
1908
Object number: 87.78
NYC, #2697
Lewis Hine
1911
Object number: 87.79
Spinner in a A.C. Mill, #346
Lewis Hine
1908
Object number: 87.80