Nancy Elizabeth Prophet’s Home

Nancy Elizabeth Prophet, the first African American graduate from RISD, resided here before her Paris pilgrimage in 1922.  She lived with her father and husband after graduation, working on various artistic mediums before discovering her calling for sculpting.  During her stay at 62 Benefit Street, she was invited to exhibit one of her paintings, only to be notified that she was not allowed to “stand next to her work”; or in other words, the showroom was unfit for her “brown face”.  “Sick, but with dogged determination to conquer”, Prophet fled to hone her bust-work and sculpting with “the great masters” of Paris.

Nancy Elizabeth Prophet

Nancy Elizabeth Prophet was the first African American graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design. She became a known Harlem Renaissance Sculptor and lived in New York, Paris, and Atlanta, before returning to Rhode Island. Prophet received financial assistance from Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney 1922 to study in Paris. It was here where she attracted the attention of artist Henry O. Tanner. He was impressed by her work and recommended her for the Harmon foundation Prize, which she won. Prophet’s work was exhibited in Paris and received notable attention. In 1932, she returned to America and began teaching at Spelman College and then Atlanta University in 1939. However, she learned quickly that opportunities in art were limited for Black women. Prophet returned to Rhode Island in 1945 and struggled to build a profitable career and with no connections and little money, she began to work in domestic service. In 1978, work was displayed as a portion of the “Four from Providence” exhibit at the Bannister Gallery of Rhode Island College. - written by Keila Davis

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Amos Allen House

A medium sized, well-preserved house from the late eighteenth century.

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