[Cabinet Card and Business Card of P.G. Lowery]
- Chicago: J.B. Wilson, 1890
Chicago: J.B. Wilson, 1890. Good +. Cabinet card measures 6¼” x 4¼”; business card is 1¾” x 3¼”. Cabinet card good plus due to moderate edge wear and some surface loss; business card good with uneven horizontal crease.
This is an exceptionally rare cabinet photograph along with a photographically illustrated business card of P.G. Lowery, the important musician and band leader. Betsy Golden Kellem's 2020 profile of Lowery (https://drinkswithdeadpeople.com/2020/01/p-g-lowery/) tells us that he was born in Kansas in 1869 to formerly enslaved parents. He came from a musical family, claimed to be largely self-taught, and in 1895 he enrolled at the Boston Conservatory of Music, becoming its first-ever Black graduate. In 1920, his band was the first African American band to play the main show at the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus. Kellem shared,
“A gifted businessman as well as a musician, Lowery advocated for other black performers and employees: training leaders and musicians, creating opportunities for talented black performers, and improving overall labor conditions at the circus, going so far as to lead a 1915 strike on the Hagenbeck-Wallace show in protest of wage and benefit cuts for black staff members . . . Lowery was renowned for the quality of his band and the ability to teach others in a certain style and quality of performance, making others recognizable as being from the 'Lowery school.'”
We find no similar images of Lowery, nor any holdings of his business card.
This is an exceptionally rare cabinet photograph along with a photographically illustrated business card of P.G. Lowery, the important musician and band leader. Betsy Golden Kellem's 2020 profile of Lowery (https://drinkswithdeadpeople.com/2020/01/p-g-lowery/) tells us that he was born in Kansas in 1869 to formerly enslaved parents. He came from a musical family, claimed to be largely self-taught, and in 1895 he enrolled at the Boston Conservatory of Music, becoming its first-ever Black graduate. In 1920, his band was the first African American band to play the main show at the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus. Kellem shared,
“A gifted businessman as well as a musician, Lowery advocated for other black performers and employees: training leaders and musicians, creating opportunities for talented black performers, and improving overall labor conditions at the circus, going so far as to lead a 1915 strike on the Hagenbeck-Wallace show in protest of wage and benefit cuts for black staff members . . . Lowery was renowned for the quality of his band and the ability to teach others in a certain style and quality of performance, making others recognizable as being from the 'Lowery school.'”
We find no similar images of Lowery, nor any holdings of his business card.
Details
Title
[Cabinet Card and Business Card of P.G. Lowery]
Condition
Good
Publisher
J.B. Wilson: Chicago
Date
1890