In today’s world, the schoolteachers who are appreciated by society are, we hope, those who inspire children to learn and whose classrooms will long be remembered by their students as the places where education came alive. In 1953, those things were important too. But, judging by this LIFE story from that February, skill wasn’t all that mattered.
Nell Owen taught speech class to first- through sixth-graders in Dallas, and she was—according to a contest to which her students submitted her picture—the “prettiest teacher in the U.S.” The contest, as LIFE explained, was sponsored by the hit CBS radio (and later television) program Our Miss Brooks, which starred Eve Arden as a high-school teacher. The prize was a trip to meet Arden in Hollywood. Though the show was a comedy, its subject matter wasn’t all frivolous: the first episode starts with Miss Brooks’ enthusiasm for her work and another episode depicted Miss Brooks confronting the lack of resources for heating fuel at her school.
That juxtaposition of lightheartedness and serious education matters would also prove appropriate for a contest won by Owen. While the ranking of elementary-school teachers by their looks seems quite retrograde these days, her career was about more than her face. The principal of her school told LIFE that he had worried she would be “another discipline case” whom “those kiddos will take…by storm.” After a year of teaching, at only 21 years old, Owen had been dubbed “durable as she is fetching.”
Liz Ronk edited this gallery for LIFE.com. Follow her on Twitter @lizabethronk.
Nell Owen, voted “prettiest school teacher in the U.S.” in 1953.
Ed Clark The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Nell Owen listened intently as sixth-grader Kathy Kennmer gave an extemporaneous speech to class.
John Dominis The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Mrs. Owen gave her students tips on speaking: “Don’t look off all around the room…if you don’t know what you’re talking about, nobody else will.”
John Dominis The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Nell Owen addressed her class in Dallas, 1953.
John Dominis The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Nell Owen addressed her class, 1953.
John Dominis The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Nell had been married for nearly two years to George Owen, a chemical manufacturer.
John Dominis The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Nell’s students saw her off on her trip to Hollywood.
John Dominis The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Bound for Hollywood, Nell received farewell hugs from some of her students at the airport.
John Dominis The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Nell and husband George boarded the plane for Hollywood.
John Dominis The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Today’s fashions are never divorced from those of the past—something to keep in mind while looking back at the fashions of the 1950s, as shown on the cover of LIFE. Throughout the decade, the magazine traced the evolution of fashion from demure tailored shirts and classic beach looks to casual college trends and elegant evening wear. (And, of course, “canasta pajamas.”) Perhaps these images will prove to be a trove of inspiration for the fashion-minded of today.
Liz Ronk, a photo editor at LIFE.com, curated this gallery. Follow her on Twitter @lizabethronk.
These photographs, taken by LIFE photographer Robert W. Kelley in 1959, show a very strange party in progress. A llama, a kangaroo, a monkey, some goats, several dogs and a couple of cats are all getting a bath in what appears to be an urban backyard. Later, in the same place and on what appears to be the same day, they attend a party with the pianist Skitch Henderson. The photographs never ran in the magazine, and nor did the story for which they were taken.
So what’s going on here?
Another LIFE story about a llama, published two years before these pictures were taken, offers a clue. It was a short one-page item about Animal Talent Scouts, a company run by Bernard and Lorrain D’Essen in New York City, who provided animal actors for theater and television—including Linda the Llama. A small photograph of Mrs. D’Essen in her living room shows a similar assortment of creatures: several dogs, a kangaroo and a llama. Among the dogs, the breeds also overlap—a basset hound, a sheepdog, a few greyhounds and what appears to be a saluki. The dark-haired woman in the later photos might be the same woman from the earlier photograph.
Contemporary news reports about the business which supply the information that Lorrain D’Essen worked in advertising, where she realized there was a market for trained animals for commercials also confirm that the D’Essen’s New York City home, at 331 West 18th St., had a yard. Other, wilder animals with the Animal Talent Scouts agency lived in New Jersey.
Here’s another clue: the date on the unpublished photos was May 1, 1959, just a couple of weeks before the release of Lorrain D’Essen’s well-reviewed memoir, Kangaroos in the Kitchen. (The book became a TV movie in 1982.) Was this perhaps a book party?
Though no record exists of that particular get-together, the evidence is overwhelming. These were no ordinary animals. They were—and remain—stars.
The llama smelled a woman’s hair, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
The kangaroo and llama party, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
A group of animals, including a llama and kangaroo, were curious about bath time, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
The kangaroo and llama party, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
The kangaroo was about to be bathed.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Two cats looked down at the other animals getting a bath, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
A small dog was bathed in a tub, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
A llama and goat were bathed in the backyard, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
A Basset Hound was bathed in the backyard, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
A kangaroo was dried off with a vacuum cleaner as a llama looked on, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
A llama was dried off after a bath, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
A llama dried off after a bath, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
A monkey in the backyard, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Pianist and conductor Skitch Henderson (center) enjoyed the llama’s company during a party, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
A Siamese cat and kangaroo at the center of a party, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
The backyard llama party as seen from above, 1959.
Robert W. Kelley The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
In 1957, when Queen Elizabeth II was about five years into her reign, she paid a visit to North America, complete with all the pomp and circumstance one might expect of a royal tour. She met with President Eisenhower and Vice-President Nixon; visited her subjects in Canada, where she opened a session of the country’s parliament; visited Jamestown, Va., site of the first permanent British settlement in America; and took in her very first American college football game, in which Maryland beat North Carolina. (Her take: “My, it’s exciting!”)
The visit wasn’t all parties. Coming in the midst of the Cold War, the alliance between the U.S. and Britain was as crucial as ever. As LIFE noted, the Queen’s visit coincided with another by Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, who was in Washington for “urgent policy talks” about Soviet accusations that the U.S. and Turkey were planning to attack Russian-armed Syria.
More than 60 years later, that alliance remains strong and so does the urge to celebrate.
Liz Ronk edited this gallery for LIFE.com. Follow her on Twitter @lizabethronk.
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip during their 1957 North America tour.
Ed Clark The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth II, 1957
Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth at College Park’s Byrd Stadium during her 1957 North American tour.
Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth at College Park’s Byrd Stadium during her 1957 North American tour.
Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Original caption: “Close-up is provided as teams, Maryland, right, line up. Queen (center) is almost on scrimmage line.”
Hank Walker The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Original caption: “Absorbed spectator, the Queen turns to question [University of Maryland President] Elkins. At right is Governor McKeldin.”
Ed Clark The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Original caption: “Accompanied by the President and met at the door by Mrs. Eisenhower, Elizabeth and Philip arrive at the White House for their four-day-stay.”
Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth with Richard Nixon during her North American tour, 1957.
Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth II (L), Vice President Richard M. Nixon (C), and Prince Philip (2R), during a luncheon for the Queen during her North American tour in 1957.
Ed Clark The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth, Richard Nixon, Mrs. Eisenhower, and Prince Philip in Washington D.C. during the Queen’s North American tour in 1957.
Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth with U.K. Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd during her North American tour in 1957.
Ed Clark The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth visiting Jamestown, Va. Replica of colonists’ ship “Susan Constant” in the background.
Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Original caption: “With `Parson,’ Queen visits James Fort Church replica.”
Ed Clark The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Original caption: ” Decorated girl scout, Jennifer Ankers, gets notice. `You have a lot of medals,’ said Philip. `Six,’ she replied. In back is Governor Thomas Stanley.”
Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Original caption: “Mock prisoners, locked in the stocks for her edification, amuse the Queen. `Does it hurt?’ she asked, while Philip inquired, `Do they throw rotten eggs at you?’ The prisoners replied, `No.'”
Ed Clark The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip during their North American tour in 1957.
Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip, and [Governor General of Canada] Vincent Massey during the Queen’s North American tour in 1957.
Ed Clark The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip during their visit to Williamsburg, 1957.
Ed Clark The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth during her North American tour, 1957.
Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Queen Elizabeth during her North American tour, 1957.
Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
It could take up to five days for a tourist on muleback to reach Havasu Canyon in 1947. But take one look at the brilliant blue-green water of Havasu Falls, and it’s obvious why so many have decided to make that particular Grand Canyon excursion. As LIFE put it back then, “A tourist usually visits the Grand Canyon only long enough to realize how much more he could see and learn if he stayed longer.”
That image was one of the few photographs printed in color for a story LIFE ran that September about the Grand Canyon and its geology, history and wildlife and, last but not least, its appeal to tourists. The couple of color images that made it into the magazine, however, represented just a slice of what LIFE kept to itself or printed in black and white; a few of those unprinted images can be seen here. Grand Canyon National Park was established in 1919, and by the time that article was published, about a half a million visitors made their way there each year. Today, that annual count is ten times higher, with a whopping 5 million tourists exploring one of America’s greatest natural wonders.
Liz Ronk edited this gallery for LIFE.com. Follow her on Twitter @lizabethronk.
Havasu Falls, at the canyon’s western end, are in the Havasupai Indian Reservation, which could be reached by a 14-mile horseback trip from the South Rim. The Indian name, Havasupai means “people of the blue-green water,” derived from the brilliant color of the lime-impregnated water of Havasu Creek.
Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Grand Canyon National Park, 1947.
Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Grand Canyon National Park, 1947.
Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Grand Canyon National Park, 1947.
Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Grand Canyon National Park, 1947.
Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Grand Canyon National Park, 1947.
Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Grand Canyon National Park, 1947.
Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Grand Canyon National Park, 1947.
Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Grand Canyon National Park, 1947.
Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock
Gordon Parks is one of America’s most celebrated photographers. He is also one of the most misunderstood. Museums and galleries around the world have celebrated him as the creator of some of the 20th century’s most iconic images. Yet to appreciate only his achievements as an artist is to underestimate his importance as a documentary photographer and journalist. The photo essays Parks produced, primarily for LIFE magazine from the 1940s to the 1970s, on issues relating to poverty and social justice, established him as one of the era’s most significant interpreters of American society. His peers were writers like Ralph Ellison and James Baldwin as much as they were LIFE photographers like Margaret Bourke-White and W. Eugene Smith. Visual Justice: The Gordon Parks Photography Collection at Wichita State University, an exhibition at the Ulrich Museum of Art (for which I served as senior project advisor), examines photographs from six of his most powerful photo essays, enriching our understanding of his work in its historical context.
In interviews and in his memoirs, Parks, who passed away in 2006, always emphasized that there was “no special black man’s corner” for him at LIFE. He was as comfortable photographing celebrities, Paris fashions and Benedictine monks as he was an impoverished family in Harlem and Black Panther Party members in Oakland. Photographs which are far removed from pressing social concerns make up part of Visual Justice. Yet, as its title suggests, the photo essays that grapple with social justice are at the heart of the exhibition.
“Harlem Gang Leader,” from 1948, was Parks’ second major assignment for LIFE. Parks spent a month with 17-year-old Red Jackson, the teenaged gang leader of the story’s title, and other members of the Midtowners gang. His goal, he once said, was to show that juvenile delinquents were teenagers whose lives could be turned around if the right social service agencies intervened. As Russell Lord, a curator at the New Orleans Museum of Art, has shown, Parks discovered that when he turned in his film to LIFE’s laboratories, he ceded control of his story to the magazine’s editors. While the tone of the published photo essay was generally sympathetic to Jackson and the other gang members, it emphasized violence and slighted the potential for rehabilitation. Parks learned his lesson. His eagerness to write the text that accompanied his future photographs reflected his desire to assert more control over their message.
Parks was one of LIFE’s best known and most admired photographers by the time that “The White Devil’s Day Is Almost Over,” his photo essay about the Black Muslims, appeared in 1963. His star status allowed him to exert more control over his story than he had over previous stories. The result was a nuanced and finely textured photo essay that challenged conventional wisdom about the group. Visual Justice contains 30 of the photographs that Parks made, most never before published or exhibited, during the three months he worked on the assignment, traveling from New York to Los Angeles, with stops in Chicago and Phoenix. They portray a religious community that is far different from the dangerous collection of fanatics that television and the press usually depicted. They emphasize the importance of family, faith and disciplined, peaceful protest. Many of the images show Malcolm X, who was Parks’ guide through the world of the Black Muslims, in a variety of roles spokesman, prayer leader, amateur photographer.
In 1968, Parks” editors challenged him to show them (and LIFE’s readers) the roots of the anger and frustration that were then so evident in the African American community. In “A Harlem Family,” his subjects were the Fontenelles, a family whose lives were battered by menial jobs, poor schools and wretched living conditions. Their plight tortured Parks, who often found himself buying food for them. Darkness and despair pervade the photographs. Plaster peels from the walls of the family’s apartment; children huddle under blankets for daytime warmth; the father stares blankly into a void.
In the pages of LIFE, “A Harlem Family” began not with a photograph, but with a prose-poem by Parks. Speaking in the voice of Black America, he asked his readers, whom he understood to be white, to “Look at me. Listen to me. Try to understand my struggle against your racism.” Parks hoped to provoke a response, and he got it. Hundreds of letters, now preserved in the Gordon Parks Papers at Wichita State University, poured into the magazine’s offices. Some were hostile, blaming the Fontenelles for their own misery. Many were sympathetic, however, expressing concern and asking how to help the family. Readers sent money. Their contributions were enough, in fact, that when LIFE topped them off, the Fontenelles were able to move out of Harlem and into a new apartment in Queens. But tragedy followed them. In the spring of 1969, LIFE reported that a fire had broken out in the family’s new home and that the father, Norman, and a son, Kenneth, had died. In his memoirs, Parks described the overwhelming guilt he felt for their fate. He stayed in touch with them until the end of his life, offering them a hand whenever they needed it.
Parks was a man of many pursuits photographer, novelist, poet, memoirist, filmmaker, composer. But he is most remembered as a photographer. And while some of his images live on because they delight the eye with their beauty, others endure because of the way that they touched the hearts and minds of millions of LIFE’s readers and changed, if only just a little, the course of American history.
Red Jackson, Harlem, 1948, from “Harlem Gang Leader.”
Photograph by Gordon Parks Courtesy and copyright The Gordon Parks Foundation
Untitled, Harlem, 1948, from “Harlem Gang Leader.”
Photograph by Gordon Parks Courtesy and copyright The Gordon Parks Foundation
Daily Prayer, Brooklyn, 1963, from “Black Muslims.”
Photograph by Gordon Parks Courtesy and copyright The Gordon Parks Foundation
Malcolm X Leads Muslims in Prayer, Chicago, 1963, from “Black Muslims.”
Photograph by Gordon Parks Courtesy and copyright The Gordon Parks Foundation
Bessie and Little Richard the Morning After She Scalded Her Husband, Harlem, 1967, from “Harlem Family.”
Photograph by Gordon Parks Courtesy and copyright The Gordon Parks Foundation
Gordon Parks with the Fontenelle children, from “Harlem Family,” 1967.
Photograph by Gordon Parks Jr. Courtesy and copyright The Gordon Parks Foundation