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NASH, MISS. WITH WOUNDED SOLDIERS

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Summary

A large group of people standing on a sidewalk, Library of Congress Harris and Ewing collection

Title from unverified caption data received with the Harris & Ewing Collection.

Gift; Harris & Ewing, Inc. 1955.

General information about the Harris & Ewing Collection is available at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.hec

Temp. note: Batch two.

The Harris & Ewing, Inc. Collection of photographic negatives includes glass and film negatives taken by Harris & Ewing, Inc., which provide excellent coverage of Washington people, events, and architecture, during the period 1905-1945. Harris & Ewing, Inc., gave its collection of negatives to the Library in 1955. The Library retained about 50,000 news photographs and 20,000 studio portraits of notable people. Approximately 28,000 negatives have been processed and are available online. (About 42,000 negatives still need to be indexed.)

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Tags

glass negatives harris and ewing collection harris and ewing photo ultra high resolution high resolution casualties wwi world war i female portrait woman young woman world war two second world war crowd library of congress portrait photographs officer military portrait
date_range

Date

01/01/1918
collections

in collections

Harris & Ewing

The Harris & Ewing, Inc. Collection of photographic negatives. Washington DC.
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Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

https://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on publication. For more information, see Harris & Ewing Photographs - Rights and Restrictions Information http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/140_harr.html

label_outline Explore Military Portrait, Young Woman, Casualties

The last American wounded arriving from the front at the Salisbury Hospital, erected by the American Red Cross at Southampton, England. They are unloaded by the boys of the Kentucky unit now on duty at this base hospital

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

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

King and Queen of England inspect Red Cross activities at the American hospital, Dartford, near London. The king couldn't wait until he got inside a ward to talk with the wounded. On his way to the first of the wards he notices a row of wounded cots out doors, whom the Brooklyn nurses had brought out so that they might enjoy the warm autumn sunshine. The King led the Queen and the Princess Mary over among these. The Queen showed much interest in the nurses as well as the wounded men and asked them many questions about their work. The photograph shows the King talking with Colonel E.H. Fiske of Brooklyn, commander of the hospital. Princess Mary is visible just behind the Queen, and near her the Chief Nurse, Miss Annie Mack of Brooklyn

CAMP MEADE, MARYLAND. WINTER VIEWS

U.S. soldiers & German wounded - Glass negative photogrpah. Public domain.

Hollywood starlet arrives to participate in National Airmail Week. Washington, D.C., May 15. Miss Marion Weldon, Paramount starlet, waves a greeting to the throng as she arrived at Washington Airport today to participate in National Airmail Week as a representative of the film city. Miss Weldon was selected for the honor by the 22 pilots and stunt men who appeared with her in the forthcoming Paramount technicolor production "Men with Wings," 5/15/38

127th Annual Commencement of Georgetown U., 6/8/26

First Aid at Front in France to U.S. soldiers

World War I in Palestine and the Sinai

A busy day on the Red Cross bus line, which carries wounded soldiers from the London "tube" station to the Roehampton hospital, where American workmen fit and adjust artificial limbs for the British army. This Red Cross bus makes sixteen round trops daily. A famous ARC poster "The First Three" is carried on the back platform

U.S. tourists in Tokyo. Tourists passing through lines of rickshaws holding other tourists.

Topics

glass negatives harris and ewing collection harris and ewing photo ultra high resolution high resolution casualties wwi world war i female portrait woman young woman world war two second world war crowd library of congress portrait photographs officer military portrait