Lincoln Motion Picture Company

February 16, 2007 
/ Contributed By: John W. Ravage

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Lincoln Motion Picture Company

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African American audiences were generally ignored by the major motion picture studios in the first two decades of the 20th century. Nonetheless, demand for films aimed at black theaters in both the South and larger northern cities prompted the formation of several โ€œblackโ€ motion picture production companies. Most of these black-owned enterprises were outside of southern California. Ebony Films and the William Foster Studio were based in Chicago, Illinois. The Norman Film Company was formed in Jacksonville, Florida. Others like Peter P. Jones Photoplay Company and the Afro-American Film Company were also founded in the midwest.

Lincoln Motion Picture poster for The Realization of a Negro’s Ambition
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Sensing a market, major Hollywood studios like Fox and Paramount eventually created so-called race film units in the late 1920s. They produced all-black-cast movies that they shaped to appeal simultaneously to white and black audiences.

The Lincoln Motion Picture Company in Omaha, Nebraska is considered the first all-black movie production unit in the country. Its entire output was aimed directly at African American viewers. Founded in 1916 by brothers Noble and George Johnson and soon relocated to Los Angeles, the company made and distributed five films, which were generally limited to โ€œspecial showingsโ€ for African Americans in churches and small assembly halls. However, production expenses and minimal sales limited their ability to create additional films. As a result, the brothers went their separate ways. Their lack of long-term success, however, was only prologue to a burst of activity by small, all-African-American, filmmakers that would grow enormously by the mid-1940โ€™s, when literally hundreds of movies (from musical featurettes to longer films) would proliferate not only in southern locations but also in larger northern cities.

About the Author

Author Profile

Dr. John W. Ravage is Professor Emeritus of Mass Communication at the University of Wyoming, where he also taught as an adjunct professor of African American Studies. His background is in television and film history, writing, production and direction, as well. He has produced books, academic and popular journal articles and television documentaries on the black experience in the Trans-Mississippi West, including Alaska, Canada and Hawaii. His collection of over three thousand photographic images of blacks in the West ranks as one of the larger private libraries in the country. He has served as consultant/writer for groups such as Bill Miles, Educational Films and WTBS Superstation and has written for History of Photography, in England. Ravage serves as consultant to the Eiteljorg Museum of the American West, the Cincinnati Art Museum, the Seattle Museum of History and Industry and the Smithsonian Institution on the African-American West and the works of James Presley Ball, a renowned African American photographer of the West. His books include: Television: The Directorโ€™s Viewpoint (Boulder: West View Press, 1978), Singletree, a novel of the black experience in the West (Jelm Mountain, 1990), Kenneth Wiggins Porterโ€™s The Negro On The American Frontier (Editor, 2ND. ed., Ames Publishers, 1996), and Black Pioneers, Images Of The Black Experience On The American Frontier (University of Utah Press, 1997, 2002). A member of the Western Writers of America, he is available for lectures on The Black West.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Ravage, J. (2007, February 16). Lincoln Motion Picture Company. BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/lincoln-motion-picture-company/

Source of the Author's Information:

Larry Richards, African American Films Through 1959 (Jefferson, N.C. and London: McFarland and Company, Inc., Publishers, 1998).

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