Floride Green | |
---|---|
Born | 1863 Alabama, US |
Died | October 24, 1936 (aged 72–73) San Francisco |
Occupation | Photographer |
Floride Green (1863 – October 24, 1936) was an American photographer.
Floride Green was born in either Eutaw, Alabama,[1] or Mobile in 1863 to Rebecca (Pickens) and Duff Green.[2][3] Her family moved to Stockton, California, in 1872, after the South lost the American Civil War, and Floride was educated in California.[3][4] She graduated from a normal school in 1883 and began working as a teacher.[2] While teaching school in San Francisco, she took up amateur photography.[4] According to a history of Alabama photography, however, she took her first photographs on a visit to Alabama to see family.[2] Green met Lillie Hitchcock Coit in high school in St. Helena, California, and later published a book about Coit titled Some Personal Recollections of Lillie Hitchcock Coit.[3]
Green came to New York around 1897, where she started a photography business with a studio at 28 West 30th Street, Manhattan.[4] She specialized in photographs taken inside her subjects' homes, which required special attention to light.[4] Before taking photographs of children at their homes, she would make a preliminary visit to determine the best time of day to take their portrait.[5] Reportedly, her photographs of Black people in the South were transferred to slides and shown in Europe.[4] Her work was also shown at a 1900 exhibit of women's photography at the Exposition Universelle.[2]
She died on October 24, 1936, at the Dante Sanitarium in San Francisco.[3][6]