“DUMMY BOARD” OF PHYLLIS, A NEW ENGLAND SLAVE

This life-size portrait of a slave woman named Phyllis, a mulatto who worked as a domestic servant for her owner, Elizabeth Hunt Wendell, was painted sometime before 1753. Known as a “dummy board,” it was propped against a wall or placed in a doorway or window to suggest that the residence was occupied and to discourage thieves. Courtesy of Historic New England.