WATER WORKED

Segregated facilities, Oklahoma City, OK, 1939


Lee was hyper aware of the segregatation of the south. He repeatedly photographed it when he en=countered it. Since mostof his 1930s work was done of people laboring, he constantly interacted with Latino and African-American people.
Did his photography get seen.
Director Roy Stryker of the Historic Unit of the FSA hesitated but went ahead with the distribution of images like the oner above.
Fully aware that the funding for the FSA project came from Congress and that nearly a third of the House was segregationist, Stryker exposed himself to being de-platformed by this southern block, which, as the 30s went on, became a running battle leading all the way up to World War II.
Did it get published?
Yes, occasionally and only in the northern and far western press.
It was a beginning, leading the public forward 15 years to the first major Civil Rights Act of 1964.
In a way, Lee, fully aware, was not only shooting “hard times,” but, in his mind, “better times.”





Continue Reading

ARREY AND DERRY AND DAIRIES

Abandoned 1938 Dodge, Derry, New Mexico, 2010 by ©Bruce Berman

The main highway between Las Cruces and the towns of Arrey and Derry in New Mexico isInterstate 25 (I-25).. This route passes through these towns and is the primary thoroughfare connecting southern and northern parts of the state. In the past, U.S. Route 85 (US 85) also followed this route, but with the construction of I-25, US 85 was relegated to a secondary highway. 
Russell Lee undoubtedly passed through this town as he went from El Paso, Texas to the south to northern New Mexico (Albuquerque, Sante Fe, Taod and beyond).

Continue Reading