Like so many people, I spend idle hours on Instagram, scrolling through an endless feed of over-saturated pictures of avocado toast and people who seem to be having more fun than I ever do. Recently, during my aimless scanning, I came across a picture of a nondescript row house. The caption—really, it was more of an essay—started: “I grew up East of the Anacostia River. Back then a trip to the National Mall, The White House, the Smithsonian, and many other places was rare.”
A photo posted by Jarrett Hendrix (@jarrett.hendrix) on
What followed was a personal story about growing up in D.C., peppered with anecdotes about the city’s history. Instagram can skew artificial, but here was something that seemed honest. I was hooked; I wanted to know more about this guy who was writing the story of his life and his city in Instagram captions.
A photo posted by Jarrett Hendrix (@jarrett.hendrix) on
Jarrett Hendrix is a local photographer. He recently worked with Instagram, the Congressional Black Caucus, and the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation on the #MakeYourMap project, which highlighted important sites in D.C.’s black history by encouraging Instagrammers to add photos from their own lives using the hashtag. Jarrett ran with it and has been telling his own story ever since.