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Primrose: The celebrated piebald boy, a native of the West Indies; publicly [sic] shewn in London 1789

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@ The Library Company of Philadelphia

Description

Full-length portrait of John Richardson Primrose Bobey, a young Black man with the pigmentation disorder vitiligo, born enslaved in Jamaica, and inspected and exhibited as a specimen of science throughout England. Shows the young man standing on a shoreline. He stands with palm trees in the distance. He is dressed in a loincloth knotted on his left hip and adorned with tassels. White patches are visible on his legs, torso, and down the center of his head. In his right hand, he holds up a captioned portrait broadside of himself as a boy and points to it with his left hand bent at the elbow and from in front of his waist. The broadside depicts the very young Bobey with primarily white skin above text reading "A Child born at Gros Islet, in the Island of St. Lucia, of Black Parents, Taken from a model of the infant colored from nature," and at the museum of T. Pole, Surgeon, Grace Church, in London." In adulthood in London, Bobey advocated for his freedom from enslavement and was a proprietor of a menagerie and a member of several societies, including the Free Masons.; Title from item.; Manuscript note on recto: Presented T. Pole Surgeon, London, to the Library of Philadelphia.; Publication information inferred from broadside illustrated in image and address of London publishers Wm. Darton & Jos. Harvey.

Record Contributed By

The Library Company of Philadelphia

Record Harvested From

PA Digital