This 1895 Photo of a Girl Holding Her Sister’s Hand Seemed Normal — Until Restoration Revealed

When museum curator Dr. Helen Foster examined this 1895 photograph in 2021, she saw what everyone else had seen for 126 years. Two sisters in matching white dresses holding hands in a garden, their faces serious in that typical Victorian way. The photograph had been donated anonymously to the Boston Historical Society with only a handwritten note.

 

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The Davy’s sisters, 1895. May they finally rest. Helen almost filed it away without a second thought. But then she noticed something odd about the smaller girl’s hand. The way the fingers curled, the unnatural angle. She ordered a highresolution scan. What the restoration revealed made Helen understand why this photograph had been hidden for over a century and why the note said, “Finally, rest.

 

This isn’t just a photograph of two sisters. It’s a photograph of a promise that lasted beyond death. The photograph arrived at the Boston Historical Society on March 15th, 2021 in a plain manila envelope with no return address.

 

Inside was a single sepia toned photograph approximately 5×7 in mounted on thick cardboard backing typical of 1890s studio photography. The image showed two girls standing in what appeared to be a garden. The older girl, perhaps 10 or 11 years old, stood on the left wearing a white Victorian dress with lace collar and puffed sleeves.

 

Her dark hair was pulled back severely from her face. Her expression was solemn, almost haunted. Beside her stood a smaller girl, maybe six or seven, also in white. She was shorter, thinner, with the same dark hair and serious expression. The younger girl’s right hand was held by the older girl’s left hand. Their fingers were intertwined tightly.

 

Behind them was a backdrop of climbing roses on a trellis. Soft afternoon light suggested the photograph had been taken outdoors, which was unusual for the era when most portraits were done in studios with controlled lighting. At the bottom of the photograph, written in faded brown ink, were the words, “Liy and Rose Davies, June 1895.

 

” The accompanying note written on modern paper in shaky elderly handwriting, said only, “The Davy’s sisters, 1,895. May they finally rest. I can’t keep this any longer. Someone should know the truth. Dr. Helen Foster, age 52, had been curator of the photographic archives at the Boston Historical Society for 18 years.