
Gordon Parks
Gordon Parks was a man of many firsts. As the New York Times noted in his 2006 obituary, Parks was the first Black photographer ever hired to the staff of LIFE magazine, the first to produce and direct a major Hollywood film (Shaft, 1971), and the first to work for the government agency that produced some of the most impactful photographic documentaries of the 1930s and 1940s.
Long acknowledged as the dean of African-American photographers, Gordon Parks is now hailed as one of the greatest photo-journalists of the 20th century.
But in 1942, Parks was just beginning his career. He was selected for a fellowship from the Julius Rosenwald Fund that brought him to Washington to work as a photographer in the Farm Security Administration. His inspiration was the work of FSA luminaries such as Dorothea Lange and Jack Delano.
That brief stint in the FSA (which disbanded in 1943) produced several memorable photographic collections. One of these was the series he took, dated July 1942, in a housing project in the nation’s capital. The “Frederick Douglass housing project for Negroes” in the Anacostia section of Washington, DC, was originally built as temporary housing for Black war workers. “Temporary” turned out to be a long time—it was finally deemed uninhabitable and vacated in 1998.
Knowing just that about the Frederick Douglass housing project, I would expect it to be a pretty cheerless place. But the sense I get from Gordon Parks’ photo essay is more of joy than despair. I guess that’s why I really love these photos and wanted to share them here.
Titles in quotes are from Parks. Those without quotes are my own.
“A dance group”

This is probably the most well known of the Douglass project photos. The joy of these young dancers, intent on doing it just right, is contagious.