Photographs of New York City and Puerto Rico

Collection Data

Description
Depictions of African Americans and Puerto Ricans living in New York City, from 1947 to 1951, and of workers and their families in Puerto Rico, in 1952, consisting of candid shots and group portraits of children, women, families, musicians, and mostly male laborers; and views of New York families at leisure, street life, construction projects, housing and living conditions, sugar cane field workers, sugar refinery workers, salt flat workers, female laundry and sewing workers, and dwellings in urban and coastal environments. A candid shot of the photographer in Puerto Rico (1952) is included. Some images are only available as contact sheets.
Names
Lachatañeré, Rómulo (Photographer)
Dates / Origin
Date Created: 1947 - 1952 (Questionable)
Library locations
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Photographs and Prints Division
Shelf locator: Sc Photo Portfolio (Lachatañeré, R.)
Topics
African Americans -- New York (State) -- New York
Puerto Ricans -- New York (State) -- New York
City & town life -- New York (State) -- New York -- 1940-1959
Street life -- New York (State) -- New York
Children -- New York (State) -- New York -- 1940-1959
Black people -- Puerto Rico
Sugar industry -- Puerto Rico -- 1950-1959
Children -- Puerto Rico -- 1950-1959
Puerto Rico -- Economic conditions -- 1918-1952
Puerto Rico -- Social conditions -- 1952-
East Harlem (New York, N.Y.)
Genres
Portrait photographs
Group portraits
Notes
Statement of responsibility: Rómulo Lachatañeré.
Content: Title based on photo captions and texts about the photographer.
Content: Many photographs bear handwritten captions on verso. Many items are mounted. Some contact sheets bear image selection marks on recto. Some items are duplicates.
Content: Images of Puerto Rico were developed and printed posthumously.
Biographical/historical: Rómulo Lachatañeré, 1906-1952, was born in Santiago de Cuba. A self-taught ethnologist and photographer who moved to New York City in 1939, Lachatañeré wrote articles and two books, "Oh Mio! Yemaya" (1938) and "Manual de Santeria" (1942), on Afro-Cuban religious beliefs. He also wrote articles and news reports on the conditions of Puerto Ricans living in the United States, and race relations in Cuba. In the mid-1940s, Lachatañeré began using photography as a documentary resource, recording the social and living conditions of African Americans and Puerto Ricans in East Harlem and Brooklyn, New York. In early 1952, after photographing the conditions of workers and their families in Puerto Rico, Lachatañeré died in a plane crash returning to the United States. Film rolls, mailed to his wife Sara, were posthumously developed and organized as an exhibition by his colleague Jack Lessinger.
Physical Description
Gelatin silver prints
Extent: 266 items (1.6 cubic ft., 7 boxes)
Extent: 186 photographic prints : gelatin silver, black and white ; 26 x 21 cm and smaller.
Extent: 46 photographic prints : gelatin silver, black and white ; 36 x 28 cm and smaller.
Extent: 34 contact sheets : gelatin silver, black and white ; 21 x 26 cm
Organized into two series: I. New York City, 1947-1951; II. Puerto Rico, 1952.
Type of Resource
Still image
Identifiers
RLIN/OCLC: 1281681526
NYPL catalog ID (B-number): b22630276
Universal Unique Identifier (UUID): c5a52e30-c622-012f-2288-58d385a7bc34
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