Religion

One hallmark of the American experience captured in the Museum's collections is the nation's broad diversity of religious faiths. Artifacts range from Thomas Jefferson's Bible to a huge "Sunstone" sculpture carved for a Mormon temple in Illinois in 1844 to a household shrine from the home of a Pueblo Indian in the 1990s. Furniture, musical instruments, clothing, cooking ware, and thousands of prints and figures in the collections have all played roles in the religious lives of Americans. The most comprehensive collections include artifacts from Jewish and Christian European Americans, Catholic Latinos, Protestant Arab Americans, Buddhist and Christian Asian Pacific Americans, and Protestant African Americans. One notable group is the Vidal Collection of carved figures known as santos and other folk religious material from the practice of Santeria in Puerto Rico.

Mourners at Jerry Brown's funeral, St. John Baptist Church, Oliver, Georgia, October 1976.Currently not on view
Description (Brief)
Mourners at Jerry Brown's funeral, St. John Baptist Church, Oliver, Georgia, October 1976.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1976-10
maker
Walker, Diana
ID Number
2003.0250.117
accession number
2003.0250
catalog number
2003.0250.117
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
designer
Easter, Dana
maker
Easter, Dana
ID Number
2003.0290.03.01
accession number
2003.0290
catalog number
2003.0290.03.01
Jerry Brown's coffin being carried from church following the funeral, St. John's Baptist Church, Oliver, Georgia, October 1976.Currently not on view
Description (Brief)
Jerry Brown's coffin being carried from church following the funeral, St. John's Baptist Church, Oliver, Georgia, October 1976.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1976-10
maker
Walker, Diana
ID Number
2003.0250.118
accession number
2003.0250
catalog number
2003.0250.118
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1976
publisher; user
Studio Museum of Harlem
maker
Studio Museum of Harlem
ID Number
1993.0567.10
catalog number
1993.0567.10
accession number
1993.0567
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1864 circa
depicted (sitter)
Burnside, Ambrose E.
Garrison, William Lloyd
Shaw, Robert Gould
ID Number
2018.0124.05e
accession number
2018.0124
catalog number
2018.0124.05
Diorama depicting the Fisk University Jubilee Singers, based on a painting by Edmund Havel, 1873. Made of wood and paper applied to plexiglass box with electrical low-voltage lights affixed to the side panels.
Description (Brief)

Diorama depicting the Fisk University Jubilee Singers, based on a painting by Edmund Havel, 1873. Made of wood and paper applied to plexiglass box with electrical low-voltage lights affixed to the side panels. Seven female figures and four male figures made of porcelain with cotton or synthetic lower torso. The diorama includes a grand piano and bench, two chairs, and a settee, all in miniature, made from painted wood and fabric. The women's clothing is made from silk taffeta and the men's clothing from wool. Made by Diedra Bell, Washington, D.C., assisted by Stephney Keyser, Falls Church, Virginia, 1994-1998.

From the nation’s beginning, Americans have grappled with who gets educated and who pays for education. Both public and private schools have relied on a combination of public and private funding. Disparities in wealth and political influence have affected Americans’ ability to support schools. As a result, educational philanthropy has reflected inequalities in the American economy and society. Giving through contributions of time and money have both created opportunities for students and increased inequalities among them.

Barred from schools for white children due to racist practices, African Americans in the late 1800s established and supported a wide variety of educational institutions of their own. In the 1870s the Fisk University Jubilee Singers began touring the United States and Europe to raise money for the African American school. Familiarizing white audiences with black spirituals, the group also advocated for African American rights and independence.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1994 - 1998
depicted
Fisk University Jubilee Singers
maker
Keyser, Stephney J.
visual artist
Havel, Edmund
maker
Keyser, Stephney J.
ID Number
1999.0174.01
accession number
1999.0174
catalog number
1999.0174.01
This Educational card game from 1970 consists of thirty-six plastic cards and a game guide or "Quiz Game" pamphlet in a two-piece cardboard box. The cards each have a black and white drawing of a notable individual and a brief biography contained on the back of each card.
Description
This Educational card game from 1970 consists of thirty-six plastic cards and a game guide or "Quiz Game" pamphlet in a two-piece cardboard box. The cards each have a black and white drawing of a notable individual and a brief biography contained on the back of each card. The guide claims that the card game was designed to enhance student learning and promote a broader awareness of the contributions of Black Americans throughout America's past.
The cards feature: Richard Allen, Marian Anderson, Crispus Attucks, James Baldwin, Benjamin Banneker, James Beckwourth, Mary McLeod Bethune, Edward William Brooke, Ralph Bunche, George Washington Carver, Shirley Chisholm, Paul Cuffe, Benjamin O. Davis Jr., Frederick Douglass, Dr. Charles Drew, W.E.B. DuBois, Paul Lawrence Dunbar, John Hope Franklin, Prince Hall, W.C. Handy, Matthew Henson, Langston Hughes, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Lewis Latimer, Thurgood Marshall, Jan Matzeliger, Norbert Rillieux, Carl T. Rowan, Robert Smalls, Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, Booker T. Washington, Robert C. Weaver, Phillis Wheatley, Daniel Hale Williams, Granville Woods.
This card set was produced by Edu-Cards, a division of Binney and Smith, Inc., known for Crayola Crayons. Edu-Cards were originally produced by the Ed-U-Cards Company and founded about 1946 in Long Island City, New York to produce flash cards in a variety of subjects for Baby Boomers. In addition to math and reading, cards were produced for subjects like geography (states), music, science like chemistry, animals, spotter cards of plants, sea shells, and trees, and biographies of famous people. Licensed character cards were produced and used in lotto and matching games. The company was bought out by Binney and Smith in 1959 and the spelling of the product name was changed to Edu-Cards by 1963 though the packaging took a few years to change on all products. Binney and Smith is owned by Hallmark.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1970
depicted
Attucks, Crispus
Baldwin, James
Banneker, Benjamin
Bunche, Ralph Johnson
Carver, George Washington
Chisholm, Shirley
Douglass, Frederick
Franklin, John Hope
Hall, Prince
Handy, W. C.
Hughes, Langston
King, Jr., Martin Luther
Latimer, Lewis H.
Marshall, Thurgood
Truth, Sojourner
Tubman, Harriet
Washington, Booker T.
Anderson, Marian
maker
Binney and Smith Incorporated
ID Number
1998.0068.186
accession number
1998.0068
catalog number
1998.0068.186

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