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William Pat Boland, 17 years old, of Newberry County, South Carolina, with a $2,000 cup he won as first prize in a corn growing contest for boys in eight southern states. He called on President Coolidge today, May 13th

Champion corn grower greeted by president. Young William Pat Boland, 17 years old, of Newberry County, South Carolina, who won a corn growing competition from boys in eight southern states showed his prize cup to President Coolidge at the White House today May, 13th. The cup is worth $2,000

Champion corn grower greeted by president. Young William Pat Boland, 17 years old, of Newberry County, South Carolina, who won a corn growing competition from boys in eight southern states showed his prize cup to President Coolidge at the White House today May, 13th. The cup is worth $2,000

Fred Goecke with open-pollinated corn for which he has won many prizes. Marshall County, Iowa

Fred Goecke with open-pollinated corn for which he has won many prizes. Marshall County, Iowa

Valley Station, Kentucky. John E. Kalmey, age eighteen, cultivating his field of corn. In 1942, he took the championship for corn as a member of a 4-H club; he grew 97.07 bushels of corn to the acre

A young boy sitting at a table with a pen in his hand - FSA / Office of War Information Photograph

Fred Maschman, TP client, shells some of the corn grown on his new farm. This corn averaged seventy bushels to the acre. Iowa County, Iowa

Dan Mercurio, 9 yrs. old newsie, a chronic truant, selling on Capitol grounds, said he made 8 cents to-day. Lives 150 Schottes Alley. Began at 7 yrs. Location: Washington (D.C.), District of Columbia

William Pat Boland, 17 years old, of Newberry County, South Carolina, with a $2,000 cup he won as first prize in a corn growing contest for boys in eight southern states. He called on President Coolidge today, May 13th

description

Summary

A black and white photo of a man holding a trophy, Library of Congress Harris and Ewing collection

Title from unverified caption data on negative or negative sleeve.

On sleeve: Watch Your Credit Line. Copyright by Harris and Ewing.

Date based on date of negatives in same range.

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 seven.

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 william pat boland president coolidge today newberry county south carolina first prize ultra high resolution high resolution possible copyright united states history library of congress
date_range

Date

01/01/1926
collections

in collections

Harris & Ewing

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

Location

united states
create

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

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Topics

glass negatives harris and ewing collection harris and ewing photo william pat boland president coolidge today newberry county south carolina first prize ultra high resolution high resolution possible copyright united states history library of congress