Item #22920 Florida Segregated Library and Swimming Pool Photo Archive by U.S. Navy and Clearwater Photographer, George Fulmer, 1951. Segregated Jim Crow Florida.
Florida Segregated Library and Swimming Pool Photo Archive by U.S. Navy and Clearwater Photographer, George Fulmer, 1951
Florida Segregated Library and Swimming Pool Photo Archive by U.S. Navy and Clearwater Photographer, George Fulmer, 1951

Florida Segregated Library and Swimming Pool Photo Archive by U.S. Navy and Clearwater Photographer, George Fulmer, 1951

Photograph

[Jim Crow] [Florida] Segregated public facility photograph archive from Clearwater, Florida, by George Fulmer, 1951. Collection consists of 14 photographs, including 7 black-and-white photographs and 7 associated film negatives documenting African American children in a newly opened library and schoolyard, as well as a segregated swimming-pool planning meeting attended by city officials. Produced by George Fulmer, Clearwater’s longtime municipal photographer, and WWII U.S. Navy enlisted photographer, these images survive in their original studio proof envelopes from the George Fulmer Estate, recovered after the 2014–2015 demolition of the Fulmer Studio, which had stood beside the Clearwater Courthouse for over 65 years. The photographs measure 3.5" x 5“ and the negatives are on Kodak safety film measuring 4" x 5" each.

This archive captures two deeply revealing moments in the segregated civic history of mid-century Florida. The first packet, labeled and dated to summer 1951, presents five photographs of Black schoolchildren reading, playing circle games outdoors, and participating in early library programming, clear evidence of segregated educational resources but also of Black childhood joy and community-building within constrained circumstances. A white librarian or teacher is visible at the front of the classroom, underscoring the racialized hierarchy embedded in Florida’s school system prior to Brown v. Board of Education in 1954. The second packet, likely taken only weeks apart based on Fulmer’s original numbering system, documents a group of white and Black men gathered around architectural plans for a segregated municipal swimming pool. The interracial nature of the planning body illuminates the complex, often unequal negotiations around public development in Jim Crow Florida, where recreational segregation remained legal until at least 1954–1955. These photographs represent an unusual visual record of the bureaucratic process behind segregated facilities.

As part of the vast body of more than 100,000 photographs preserved from Fulmer’s studio, much of which was claimed by the local historical society, this small group represents a scarce surviving fragment of Clearwater’s visual civic record, with Fulmer’s estate retaining a curated exhibition core and only limited dispersal of individual images. Fulmer documented weddings, police activities, construction projects, civic events, and wartime subjects, but photographs relating to segregated facilities, especially of Black children and community spaces, are extremely limited in the archive. These images therefore constitute an important resource for researchers of Jim Crow Florida, Black educational history, municipal segregation, and postwar Southern urban development. Photographs and negatives are crisp and clean only expressing minimal edge wear. Original Fulmer Studio proof envelopes present, annotated in pencil with job numbers and subjects. Comes with two certificates of authenticity from the Fulmer estate. Overall very good condition.

Item #22920

Price: $1,550.00