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White Wooden Beaded Clutch

Anacostia Community Museum

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    Object Details

    Caption

    White wooden beads cover this rectangular clutch. Linen thread stitches the beads into a grid held by a cotton support. The lining’s three seams are machine-stitched, as is the metal zipper spanning the purse’s top. The clutch belonged to renowned scholar-librarian Dorothy Porter Wesley (1905-1995). After finishing high school, Porter Wesley attended Miner Normal School, which trained teachers for the District’s then-segregated African American schools. However, Miner’s librarian, Lula Allen, encouraged her to pursue library science. Porter Wesley graduated from Howard University in 1928 and became the first African American to earn a master’s degree in library science from Columbia University in 1932. For over four decades, she worked to organize and develop an unparalleled collection rooted in African American history that would become the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center at Howard University in Washington, DC.

    Cite As

    Anacostia Community Museum, Smithsonian Institution

    Date

    20th century

    Accession Number

    1997.0020.0004

    Restrictions & Rights

    CC0

    Type

    purse

    Medium

    wooden beads, cotton, linen thread, metal zipper

    Dimensions

    3 15/16 × 6 1/4 × 13/16 in. (10 × 15.8 × 2 cm)

    See more items in

    Anacostia Community Museum Collection

    Data Source

    Anacostia Community Museum

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/dl80c601179-044f-4dd4-a204-29f09e642fda

    Record ID

    acm_1997.0020.0004

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