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Image scanned and/or photographed, then color-corrected by Pat Cagney.
Florida Migrant's Car at the Norfolk-Cape Charles Ferry
Image scanned and/or photographed, then color-corrected by Pat Cagney.
Image scanned and/or photographed, then color-corrected by Pat Cagney.

Florida Migrant's Car at the Norfolk-Cape Charles Ferry

Artist Jack Delano (American, 1914 - 1997)
CultureAmerican
DateJuly 1940
MediumGelatin silver print
DimensionsOverall, Image: 6 1/2 × 9 3/8 in. (16.5 × 23.8 cm)
Overall, Paper: 8 × 10 in. (20.3 × 25.4 cm)
Overall, Mat: 20 × 16 in. (50.8 × 40.6 cm)
Credit LineMuseum purchase
Object number85.1.21
Not on view
DescriptionThis is a gelatin silver print photograph.

Label TextJack Delano American, 1914–1997 The Dock at Little Creek, Virginia, the "Gateway to the South,” the Norfolk End of the Norfolk-Cape Charles Ferry, July 1940 Gelatin silver print (photograph), printed 1984 Chrysler Museum purchase 84.78.98 bottom Jack Delano American, 1914–1997 Florida Migrant’s Car at the Norfolk-Cape Charles Ferry, July 1940 Gelatin silver print (photograph), printed 1985 Chrysler Museum purchase 85.1.21 Virginia’s Eastern Shore is geographically removed from the rest of the state, and the most direct path from Norfolk to Cape Charles was by ferry. In 1963, the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel, one of the longest bridge-tunnels in the world, connected the two parts of the state, saving motorists about an hour of travel. Exhibition History"Mountaineers to Main Streets: The Old Dominion as seen through the Farm Security Administration Photographs," Large Changing Gallery, Chrysler Museum of Art, May 3 - June 16, 1985. "A History of Photography: Fifteen Years at the Chrysler Museum," The Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, VA; Sept. 11, 1993 - March 6, 1994. Published ReferencesBrooks Johnson. _Mountaineers to Main Streets: The Old Dominion as seen through the Farm Security Administration Photographs_. The Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, VA. 1985: p. 81.