Lillian Evanti travel scrapbook

Creator
Evanti, Lillian, Mme. (Lillian Evans Tibbs), 1890-1967
Names
Evanti, Lillian, Mme. (Lillian Evans Tibbs), 1890-1967
Collection Photographer
Apeda Studio (New York, N.Y.)
Camuzzi, M.
Harris & Ewing
Collection Creator
Sommariva, Emilio, Photographer, 1883-1956
Harris, Fred (photographer)
Scurlock Studio (Washington, D.C.)
Place
Europe
Topic
African Americans
Creator
Evanti, Lillian, Mme. (Lillian Evans Tibbs), 1890-1967
See more items in
Evans-Tibbs Collection
Evans-Tibbs Collection / Series 5: Photographs / Photograph Albums and Scrapbooks
Biographical / Historical
Lillian Evans was born in Washington, DC to a cultured, well-educated, middle-class family. She was the first African American woman to sing opera with an organized European company. Her mother was Annie Lillian Brooks Evans, a music teacher in the DC public school system, and her father was Wilson Bruce Evans, organizer and first principal of Armstrong Technical High School in Washington, DC. Hiram Revels, the first black U.S. senator, was her great-uncle and two other family members are credited with taking part in John Borwn's raid on Harper's Ferry. She married Howard University music professor, Roy W. Tibbs in 1918. Her stage name, Madame Evanti, is a combination of her last name and her husband's. Evans had one child, Thurlow Tibbs Sr., and two grandchildren, Diane Elizabeth and Thurlow Evans Tibbs. Thurlow Jr., operated a museum, The Evans-Tibbs Collection, which centered around the life of Lillian Evans until 1996, a year before his death.
Extent
1 Item (Scapbook , postcards, 9 x 11 3/8 inches.)
Date
circa 1924-1930s
Archival Repository
Anacostia Community Museum Archives
Type
Archival materials
Scrapbooks
Postcards
Collection Citation
Evans-Tibbs collection, Anacostia Community Museum,Smithsonian Institution, gift Thurlow E. Tibbs, Jr. Estate
Rights
Use of the materials requires an appointment. Please contact the archivist at acmarchives@si.edu.
Genre/Form
Scrapbooks
Postcards
Collection Restrictions
Use of the materials requires an appointment. Please contact the archivist at acmarchives@si.edu.