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Lot 432
[AFRICAN AMERICANA - EARLY PHOTOGRAPHY]. BALL, James Presley (1825-1904), photographer. CDV of a young bride. [Cincinnati, OH], ca 1860-1870.
Sale 2057 - American Historical Ephemera and Photography
Oct 25, 2024 10:00AM ET
Live / Cincinnati
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Estimate
$400 - 600
Price Realized
$445
Sold prices are inclusive of Buyer’s Premium
Lot Description
[AFRICAN AMERICANA - EARLY PHOTOGRAPHY]. BALL, James Presley (1825-1904), photographer. CDV of a young bride. [Cincinnati, OH], ca 1860-1870.

CDV on cardstock mount showing a lovely young bride standing in partial profile, wearing a white gown, white gloves, and a long veil. She holds what appears to be a handkerchief. Lower margin of mount with J.P. Ball's blindstamp, "30 W. 4th St."

James Presley Ball (1825-1904) is one of the most renowned African American photographers, at one point owning the largest photographic gallery west of the Appalachians. When visiting White Sulphur Springs, Virginia in 1845 he met John B. Bailey, an African American Daguerreotypist from Boston where he acquired the passion and skill of photography. He opened a studio in Cincinnati later that year, and though it was unsuccessful, he continued his art with studios in Pittsburgh and Richmond and traveled as an itinerant Daguerreotypist. In 1849, he reopened a studio in Cincinnati. He hired his younger brother Thomas Ball to work as an operator, and in 1852 hired his future brother-in-law Alexander Thomas to work with him. By 1857, their gallery was one of the grandest in the United States attracting notables including Frederick Douglass. In 1887 Ball was chosen as the official photographer of a celebration of the 25th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation held in Minneapolis-St. Paul. In 1888, he moved to Helena, Montana with his son where he operated a studio for several years before moving again in 1892 to Seattle.
This lot is located in Cincinnati.
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