Timeline

The life and career of Frances Benjamin Johnston, 1864–1952

1864

Born in Grafton, West Virginia on January 15

1883

Begins studying art at the Academie Julian in Paris (through 1885)

1888

Receives a roll-film camera from family friend George Eastman and turns to photography

1894

Opens her own portrait studio in Washington, D.C.

1897

Publishes the essay "What a Woman Can Do with a Camera" in the Ladies' Home Journal

1900

Organizes an exhibition of American women photographers shown in connection with the Paris exposition; completes the Hampton Institute series

1901

Makes what is believed to be the last portrait of President William McKinley at the Pan-American Exposition

1913

Opens a New York City studio with Mattie Edwards Hewitt, specializing in garden and architectural photography

1933

Receives the first of a series of Carnegie Corporation grants to document early Southern architecture

1940

Buys a house in the French Quarter of New Orleans

1952

Dies in New Orleans on May 16 at the age of eighty-eight

Explore by Decade

1930s

57 photographs from the 1930s

1940s

6 photographs from the 1940s