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Preliminary Inventory of the Jesse Andrews photographs, 1974-2008

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Descriptive Summary

Repository
Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library, Duke University
Creator
Andrews, Jesse
Title
Jesse Andrews Photographs, 1974-2008
Language of Material
Material in English
Extent
5 Linear Feet

100 Items
Abstract
Photojournalist and regional documentary photographer working in the Virginia and North Carolina area.
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Administrative Information

Access Restrictions
Collection is open for research.
However, collection may contain materials to which the Acknowledgment of Legal Responsibilities and Privacy Rights form applies. Patrons must sign this form before using this collection.
Also, all or portions of this collection may be housed off-site in Duke University's Library Service Center. Consequently, there may be a 24-hour delay in obtaining these materials.
Please contact Research Services staff before visiting the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library to use this collection.
Copyright Notice
The copyright interests in this collection have not been transferred to Duke University. For more information, consult the copyright section of the Regulations and Procedures of the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], Jesse Andrews Photographs, Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library, Duke University.
Provenance
The Jesse Andrews photographs were received by the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library as a purchase in 2003, 2006, 2007, and 2008.
Processing Information
Processed by Elizabeth Arnold, 2003; John Mayrose, May 2007; Meghan Lyon, February 2009
Encoded by John Mayrose, May 2007; Meghan Lyon, March 2009
This collection is minimally processed: materials may not have been ordered and described beyond their original condition.
Descriptive sources and standards used to create this inventory: DACS, EAD, NCEAD guidelines, and our local Style Guide.
This finding aid is NCEAD compliant.
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Biographical Note

Jesse Andrews is a photojournalist and regional documentary photographer working in the Virginia and North Carolina area.

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Collection Overview

Collection consists of black and white 11x14 prints, dating from 1974-2008. Most photographs document agricultural life in Virginia and North Carolina, including tobacco crop production, portraits of farmers and their families, portraits of other local people, and miscellaneous images. Please see below for a more detailed description.
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Subject Headings

These are searchable subject entries for this collection. Performing a search on these subjects in the Duke University Libraries online catalog will bring up other related research materials.
List of Series in Collection
Accession, 2003 (2003-0229)
Accession, 2007 (2007-0029)
Accession, 2006 (2007-0069)
Accession, 2008 (2008-0040)
Accession, 2008 (2008-0276)
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Preliminary Description of Collection

Accession, 2003 (2003-0229)

4 Boxes
Accession consists of 37 black-and-white, 11x14 prints that comprised the exhibit 13 Month Crop, hosted by Duke University's Perkins Library, August 7-December 14, 2002. Photographs document the production of a tobacco crop on the Moore family farm in Pittsylvania County, Va. Andrews spent a year photographing the people and their work during one tobacco season (April 2000-April 2001).
Box 1-4
Photographs from the "13 Month Crop"
1. Charles Moore and Terry Moore preparing land for planting, early spring 2000
2. Lillian Moore at the Moore homeplace, 2000
3. Terry and his daughter Christine during a break from seeding greenhouse trays, early spring 2001
4. Christine helping with the seeding of the greenhouse trays, early spring 2001
5. Roy Younger placing seeded trays in the greenhouse bed, early spring 2001
6. Terry with a tray of seedlings ready for planting, spring 2000
7. Loading the planter on the first day of planting, spring 2000
8. First day of planting, spring 2000
9. Planting, spring 2000
10. Eduardo Pineda Arzata, who has worked at the Moore farm for twelve years, at the curing barns, summer 2000
11. Leonel Perez Guiterrez, who has worked at the Moore farm for four years, summer 2000
12. Maximo Perez Guiterrez, who has worked at the Moore farm for nine years, summer 2000
13. Eduardo Pineda Arzata cultivating by hand, spring 2000
14. Cam Moore, Terry's son, cultivating young tobacco, late spring 2000
15. Terry in the final step of cultivation known as "laying by," late spring 2000
16. Christine Moore aboard Moira and Renee, her mother, summer 2000
17. The Moore family gathered at the homeplace after Sunday dinner, summer 2000
18. Terry and workers, from left to right, Leonel, Eduardo and Miximo spraying to control tobacco stalk shoots called suckers, summer 2000
19. Eduardo "topping" the flowered plants, summer 2000
20. Irrigating, summer 2000
21. Terry inspecting for suckers, summer 2000
22. "Pulling" or harvesting the top leaves near the season's end, summer 2000
23. Charles Moore and workers with the final trailer of tobacco of the season, late summer 2000
24. Early morning, Terry sweeping out an empty barn, summer 2000
25. Betty Starlin, Terry, and Eduardo Pineda taking a break from barning, summer 2000
26. Pro-tobacco poster at Holland's Warehouse, late summer 2000
27. Terry with cousins Caleb and George Moore at their farm, summer 2000
28. Leonel Perez baling cured tobacco early morning, summer 2000
29. Betty and Eduardo barning newly pulled leaves, summer 2000
30. Terry and Leonel sheeting cured leaves from the barns, summer 2000
31. Sheeting tobacco at Caleb and George's farm, summer 2000
32. Eduardo, Leonel, and Maximo pushing an 850 pound bale of tobacco onto the loader in preparation for market, summer 2000
33. Terry and Charles at Holland's Warehouse on the first day of the market, Danville, Va., summer 2000
34. Terry with Dan and Danny Robertson, Owners of Holland's Warehouse, Danville, Va., summer 2000
35. A tobacco auction in progress, Hollan's Warehouse, Danville, Va., late summer 2000
36. Terry receiving his check for tobacco sales, Holland's Warehouse, Danville, Va., late summer 2000
37. Terry sows wheat as a cover crop, fall 2000

Accession, 2007 (2007-0029)

1 Box
Addition (dated 1976-2007) contains 17 black-and-white 11x14 prints. The majority of the photographs are of Bill Davis and the Davis family. Also included are some other portraits from North Carolina, Virginia, and New York City.
Box 5
Photographs
1. William Arastus Davis (Bill), 1988
2. Bill Davis braiding a belt from deer hide, 1988
Bill learned to braid leather when he was a child. His father did not want him to learn that craft so he would take the strands of leather under the covers of his bed at night and practice braiding simply by feel. He could do any sort of braid from the most simple to making what he called a "rosette" , a round knot woven from 16 strands of leather, seemingly with no beginning or end.
3. Bill Davis playing a chromatic harmonica, 1988
The chair he is sitting in was made by his grandfather, Simeon Benton Davis.
4. Bill Davis with his younger sister, Nancy Paige Davis, 1990
Bill was much older than Nancy. When she turned 18, she wanted to attend the nursing school at the University of Virginia, but their father refused to pay for her to go. Bill eventually saved enough money to send her and she graduated in 1941. She never returned to the farm except to visit and lived in Richmond until her death in 2005. This image was made during her last visit to see Bill.  She always referred to him as her "angel" and thus she was making a halo for him.
5. Orbrey Nathaniel Davis (Nat), 1979
Nat had been telling me about one of his first girlfriends. He was sad because he thought no one would ever care for him again.
6. Bill and Nat Davis playing music on their front porch, 1978
They knew hundreds of old time tunes as well as hymns and ballads.
7. Bill Davis grave, November 2006
8. The Davis family cemetery,2006
9. All that is left of what Nat Davis referred to as the "big woods"
This is where Hat and Bill hunted and trapped their entire lives. Bill used to say that the mound in the background was an Indian burial place.
10. Site of the Davis family spring, November 2006
This spring was where they got their water for nearly 100 years. It is now a mosquito breeding ground.
11. Site of the Davis family homeplace, November 2006
12. Helen Marshall at Forest Home, Blanch, N.C., 1997
13. William Haskell Egan, Charlottesville, Va., 1976
14. Crystal Graber, Ontario Cal., 1992
15. 45th St. at Broadway, New York, December 2004
16. Pond ice, 2007
17. Plant shadow, 2004

Accession, 2006 (2007-0069)

1 Box
Addition contains 35 black-and-white, 11x14 prints. The photographs are primarily portraits taken around the Halifax, Virginia area.
Box 6
Photographs  (35 11x14 prints)

Accession, 2008 (2008-0040)

1 Box
Addition (2008-0040) (1976-2007) contains 5 black and white 11x14 gelatin silver prints of a variety of subjects. The descriptions below were provided by the photographer, Jesse Andrews.
Box 7
1. Edwin Wemple, Charlottesville, Va., 1976.
Photographer: "Ed Wemple grew up in Charlottesville and graduated from the University of Virginia. He wandered the country during the depression of the 1930s. He worked as a longshoreman in New York, in lumber camps in Oregon and eventually went to Mexico, where he became a heroin addict. He cured himself by walking from El Paso to the Oklahoma border. He returned to New York, where he lived until 1964, taking in the bohemian and jazz cultures and working at odd jobs. He returned to Charlottesville in 1964 and lived there until his death in 1987. I lived in the same house with him for a year. He had not had a bath in nine years and spent his time reading and sleeping. He went by taxi once a week to the Alderman Library to replenish his book supply. A wonderful man who had endless stories to tell about his life. I regret that I did not record any of our conversations."
2. Kudzu House, 2003.
3. New Homes for Sale, 2007.
4. Plant Shadow, 2003.
5. Adam's Needle (Yucca Plant), 2003.

Accession, 2008 (2008-0276)

1 Box
Addition (2008-0276) (1974-2008) contains 6 gelatin silver 11x14 prints, primarily portraits from Halifax and Pittsylvania counties. The descriptions below were provided by the photographer, Jesse Andrews.
Box 8
1. Reid Carter, Chatham, Va., 1976.
Photographer: "Reid Carter was a mechanic who worked primarily on pulpwood trucks. He lived with his mother in a cabin without running water or electricity. When she died in 1982, at age 100, Reid lost his mind and was committed to a state mental institution in Staunton. He died a few months later."
2. North End, Boston, Mass., 1974.
Photographer: "This woman operated a tiny bakery with the help of her son in the Italian section of Boston. They made marzipan, cannolis, and other pastries, as well as several kinds of bread, all wonderful."
3. Tattoo Red's, Danville, Va., 1994.
Photographer: "Red's was a gathering place for local outlaw bikers, the Scorpions. Red died in 2007."
4. Lily Savage, Halifax, Va., 2007.
5. Halifax County, Va., 2008.
6. Bill Davis fleshing out a deer hide, Chatham, Va., 1982.
Photographer: "Bill would tan fresh deer hides to use in his leather work. He made a device which would split a hide into evenly sized strips for braiding. He made belts, sashes, hat bands, watch fobs, key holders, and guitar straps. He also did harness repairs and remade worn out shoes. But the first step in this process was to pick all the flesh off the hide. If left, the bits of flesh would attract insects to eat the hide and leave uncured spots on the finished hide."