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End of war, American National Red Cross, 1919, wwi

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Summary

Date based on date of negatives in same range.

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 27

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american red cross glass negatives photo ultra high resolution high resolution wwi first world war ww1 library of congress
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Date

01/01/1919
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Source

Library of Congress
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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 American Red Cross, Wwi, First World War

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

Repairing field telephone lines during a gas attack at the front

A group of people riding in a horse drawn carriage Farm Security Administration / Office of War Information photo.

Cows of History. Extraordinarily beautiful and picturesque are the long-horned, snow white cows of the Tuscan valleys in Italy. Their horns measure about twenty inches across and their silky tails often sweep the ground. Since the war they are becoming very scarce owing to lack of fodder, and land holders are haunted by mythological tales of the Middle Ages when they disappeared altogether. Invaders from the North brought this breed of cattle into Italy and they were so admired by the early Romans that they each year offered up the whitest and most beautiful one as a sacrifice, gilding its horns and garlanding them with rare flowers. The Italian government presented this pair to the Agricultural Colony of the Junior Red Cross of America orphanage and vocational school where several hundred war orphans are learning scientific farming and undergoing training for their future independence

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

A black and white photo of a man standing in front of a barn, North Carolina. Farm Security Administration photograph

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

Etiennette Maisonneire. Address: 35 Rue Victor Hugo, Lyon (Rhone) protege of: Officers of Co. B. 38th Engineers, American Expeditionary Forces

World War I - American Red Cross

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

[Uncle Sam (as "Public Opinion") embracing nurse ("American womanhood"), saying: "If you are good enough for war you are good enough to vote"]

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american red cross glass negatives photo ultra high resolution high resolution wwi first world war ww1 library of congress