| 
               
                | Old African American Church located north of 
                  Oakland, Illinois.
 |   
                | 
 Stone Marker of Old Negro Cemetery located 
                    north of Oakland, Illinois. |   
                | 
 Family Home of William Washington Estell 
                    in Mattoon, Illinois. On the roof is Mr. Estell repairing 
                    the house after a 1917 tornado swept through Mattoon. |   
                | 
 Mr. William Jefferson Derrickson and Mrs. 
                    Anna Walden Derrickson with their children. They lived in 
                    Jasper County, Illinois, but their children moved to Mattoon, 
                    Illinois, and Terre Haute, Indiana. |   
                | 
 George Washington Estell and his wife, Mary 
                    Jane Kirkman Estell. |   
                | 
 Mrs. Anna Walden Derrickson of Jasper County, 
                    Illinois. Her children moved to Mattoon Illinois, and Terre 
                    Haute, Indiana. |   
                
               | In trying to reconstruct the history of African 
              Americans in Coles County, the historian faces the problem of the 
              paucity of historical records. Clearly, African Americans do not 
              exist in official historical records as the aboriginal Indians or 
              the white settlers. Where they exist in records, one is only able 
              to capture their history n fragments. This has much to do with the 
              subordinate position blacks occupied in the evolution of American 
              history and culture. Blacks were slaves. Since blacks are either 
              missing or barely visible in official documents, how does the historian 
              reconstruct their history and contributions to society? One methodological 
              tool which readily comes to mind is photography. According to Jon 
              Prosser and Dona Schwartz,  through our use of photographs we can discover 
              and demonstrate relationships that may be subtle or easily overlooked. 
              We can communicate the feeling or suggest the emotion imparted by 
              activities, environments, and interactions. And we can provide a 
              degree of tangible detail, a sense of being there and a way o f 
              knowing that may not readily translate into other symbolic modes 
              of communication. So, despite the irksome complexity of traveling 
              through contested territory, the new knowledge yielded by the innovative 
              methods we suggest makes the journey beneficial. (1)  For a minority group such as African Americans, 
              whose history and experiences have been obscured by the dominant 
              ethnic group, photography offers a valuable means of recovering 
              the past. In some sense photographs communicate a form of knowledge 
              which is open to interpretation by those who view them, but they 
              cannot easily be ignored in terms of the truth they convey. Photographs 
              have also been used for both positive and negative purposes in relation 
              to African Americans in the United States. As Deborah Willis has 
              noted,  The photographing of African Americans for personal 
              collections, scientific studies, advertising purposes, or for general 
              public use dates to 1839... Some photographers created images, specifically 
              made for private collections, that idealized family life and notable 
              individuals. Other photographers found it more profitable to create 
              a series of prejudicial and shocking photographs of their black 
              subjects, provoking critical comments, favorable as well as adverse, 
              from various communities. Many of these photographs were negative, 
              insulting images of black Americans.(2) While black images have been presented n a negative 
              light in American society, photographs do also counter the stereotypical 
              perceptions of African Americans. They help to shed positive light 
              on otherwise hidden aspects of African American life. Furthermore, 
              photographic images do also liberate the mind by offering hitherto 
              unknown facts and data. In addition, the point has to be made that 
              offering a counter black image to prevailing negative stereotypes 
              must not be seen only in terms of "the simple reduction of black 
              representation to a "positive" image..., rather it should be about 
              producing images that would convey complexity of experience and 
              feeling..."(3) It is within this context that we should try to understand 
              the role of photography as with other art forms in self representation 
              in African American history and culture. As Bell Hooks put it:  ...it is essential that any theoretical discussion 
              of the relationships of black life to the visual, to art making, 
              make photography central. Access and mass appeal have historically 
              made photography a powerful location for the construction of an 
              oppositional black aesthetic. In the world before the racial integration, 
              there was a constant struggle on the part of black folks to create 
              a counter-hegemonic world of images that stand as visual resistance, 
              create an oppositional subculture within the framework of domination, 
              recognize that the field of representation (how we see ourselves, 
              how others see us) is a site of ongoing struggle. (4)    |