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Decorating soldier graves. Lafayette Day at Cimetiere de Suresne. French children decorating the graves of two AMERICAN RED CROSS men

Decorating soldier graves. Lafayette Day at Cimetiere de Suresne. French children decorating the graves of our falling heroes

Decorating soldier graves. Services for our fallen Heroes at Cimitiere Suresne on Lafayette Day

Bligny Sanatorium for Tubercular soldiers near Paris. The building was under way when the war began. Afterwards the work had to be stopped on account of shortage of money and labor. The AMERICAN RED CROSS has appropriated funds for completing the building. Construction of septic tank for disposal of sewage

Monument to American Soldiers (& tombs) erected by Med. Priss. 2nd Co. Renvillois, Med. Chef. Amb. Autochuirurgical 2 par B.C.M. Paris, Meuse. Work done by French blessest Infirmiss

Wounded American soldier comfortably installed in the American Red Cross military hospital No. 6, a complete portable tent hospital put up by the American Red Cross at Auteuil, Paris, on the site of what was before the war a celebrated race course

Secty. Baker decorating graves of French Soldiers Bastille Day, 71220

Historic Independence Day Celebration in Paris. The American soldiers were literally covered with flowers. From every balcony along the route flowers were rained down on them. The photograph shows them at the Picpus cemetary where Lafayette is buried

An American military funeral at Belfast, Ireland. Reading the funeral service for twelve American soldiers in the City Cemetary. The officiating clergymen were the Reverend William Maguire and the Reverend Father O'Kelly, CC. Eight of the soldiers belonged to the Roman Catholic Church, three to the Methodist church, one to the Baptist. American and British army officers and American Red Cross officers were the official chief mourners

Decorating soldier graves. Lafayette Day at Cimitiere de Suresne, near Paris. AMERICAN RED CROSS workers decorating the graves of an AMERICAN RED CROSS nurse killed in the church by the large range shells of the Huns

description

Summary

Title, date and notes from Red Cross caption card.

Photographer name or source of original from caption card or negative sleeve: Barry & Bolee.

Group title: Graves and Tombs.

Gift; American National Red Cross 1944 and 1952.

General information about the American National Red Cross photograph collection is available at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.anrc

Temp note: Batch 34

Nothing Found.

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Tags

american red cross france suresnes glass negatives photo american red soldier graves graves lafayette day range shells ultra high resolution high resolution world war i wwi ww 1 library of congress
date_range

Date

01/01/1918
place

Location

france
create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

https://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on publication. For information, see "American National Red Cross photograph collection," http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/717_anrc.html

label_outline Explore Suresnes, Lafayette Day, Soldier Graves

Having a smoke. American soldier who has found good tobacco in his American Red Cross Christmas box

Dr. Baldwin. Physician in charge of the Children's Hospital, Nesle

Suzanne Schick, adopte. Address: 3 Rue Villedo, Paris. protege of: Detachment, Officer Base Censor, care of Captain B.A. Adams, American Expeditionary Forces

SHARP, WILLIAM GRAVES, AM. E.J.P. TO FRANCE, 1914-

A corridor in the Amer. Military Hospital No. 1 at Neuilly, which is supported by the A.R.C. Member of A.R.C. Home Communication Service writing a letter for an Amer. Soldier

ARC officers from England, France and Italy, in conference at London Headquarters, back row left to right, Lt. Richard Emmet of Harvard. He is assistant to the Chief of Staff at London Headquarters. He captained the winning Harvard crew this year. Major Charles M. Bakewell, Professor of Philosophy at Yale, now a Deputy Commissioner to Italy. Major Langdon P. Marvin of New York, Deputy Commissioner to Great Britain. He is a partner in the New York law firm of Marvin, Hooker and Roosevelt, and secretary of the Harvard Club of New Yorl. Front row, left to right. Major William S. Patten Deputy Comm. to Great Britain, and a Mil. Attache of the American Legation in London. Major James H. Perkins, Comm. for Europe. Lt. Col Robert P. Perkins, Comm. for Italy. Major Ralph Preston Deputy Comm. for Europe

Lt. Rob't O. Purdy Jr - Public domain photograph, glass negative

General von Pluskow who took Lodz - Glass negative photogrpah. Public domain.

General Baden-Powell and a detachment of his Boy Scouts furnish an afternoon's entertainment for the wounded Amer. soldiers at the Amer. hospital at Tottenham, near London. The hero of the afternoon's entertainment was a Scotch soldier, a resident of Tottenham, who has just been awarded the Victoria Cross for valor on the Western Front. Col. John B. Anderson of Austin, Texas, the commander of the hospital, stands next to him. General Baden-Powell is just behind the Scotchman, directly under the Amer. flag

Marcelle Despre, adopte. Address: Germeaux (Cote-d'Or) protege of: Ammunition Ord. Detachment 2nd Army; 2nd Army Ammunition & Artillery Park, American Expeditionary Forces

The Sous Prefet, the Maire, the military commander and other officials, and the ARC workers whom they entertain at the review of troops, and schoolchildren

Henry P. Davison, chairman of the War Council of the American Red Cross at the entrance to the New Red Cross Club for American officers at one of the big American camps near Winchester. In a corner of the wall is seen a christmas tree which some of the soldiers have secured and planted there temporarily to await the Christmas Festivities, which are to be on an elaborate scale in all the American Camps and Hospitals

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american red cross france suresnes glass negatives photo american red soldier graves graves lafayette day range shells ultra high resolution high resolution world war i wwi ww 1 library of congress