Harold Bride, wierless operator. J169777 [?] U.S. Copyright Office. No copyright renewal. This record contains unverified, old data from caption card, with subsequent revisions. Caption card tracings: N.Y.C. HO More
Harold Thomas Coffam, wireless operator. J169778 [?] U.S. Copyright Office. No copyright renewal. This record contains unverified, old data from caption card, with subsequent revisions. Caption card tracings: N More
J. Bruce Ismay at end of table, being questioned. J169603 U.S. Copyright Office. No copyright renewal. This record contains unverified, old data from caption card, with subsequent revisions. Caption card tracin More
J. Bruce Ismay being questioned. J169615 [?] U.S. Copyright Office. No copyright renewal. This record contains unverified, old data from caption card, with subsequent revisions. Caption card tracings: N.Y.C. HO More
Site History. House Architecture: Sir Charles Barry, built 1850-1851. Landscape: William Waldorf Astor from 1893 and Norah Lindsay from 1924. Other : Nancy Langhorne Astor and Viscount Waldorf Astor owned Clive More
Site History. House Architecture: Sir Charles Barry, built 1850-1851. Landscape: William Waldorf Astor from 1893 and Norah Lindsay from 1924. Other : Nancy Langhorne Astor and Viscount Waldorf Astor owned Clive More
Site History. House Architecture: Sir Charles Barry, built 1850-1851. Landscape: William Waldorf Astor from 1893 and Norah Lindsay from 1924. Other : Nancy Langhorne Astor and Viscount Waldorf Astor owned Clive More
Site History. House Architecture: Sir Charles Barry, built 1850-1851. Landscape: William Waldorf Astor from 1893 and Norah Lindsay from 1924. Other : Nancy Langhorne Astor and Viscount Waldorf Astor owned Clive More
From: Photographs Series Public domain photograph - New York, United States, free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description
The assassinaton of Abraham Lincoln turned Dr. Mudd's mid-19th-century farmhouse into a historic site, when presidential assassin John Wilkes Booth sought medical treatment here on his escape route into Virgini More
The assassinaton of Abraham Lincoln turned Dr. Mudd's mid-19th-century farmhouse into a historic site, when presidential assassin John Wilkes Booth sought medical treatment here on his escape route into Virgini More
The assassinaton of Abraham Lincoln turned Dr. Mudd's mid-19th-century farmhouse into a historic site, when presidential assassin John Wilkes Booth sought medical treatment here on his escape route. This dirt r More
The assassinaton of Abraham Lincoln turned Dr. Mudd's mid-19th-century farmhouse into a historic site, when presidential assassin John Wilkes Booth sought medical treatment here on his escape route into Virgini More
The assassinaton of Abraham Lincoln turned Dr. Mudd's mid-19th-century farmhouse into a historic site, when presidential assassin John Wilkes Booth sought medical treatment here on his escape route into Virgini More
The assassinaton of Abraham Lincoln turned Dr. Mudd's mid-19th-century farmhouse into a historic site, when presidential assassin John Wilkes Booth sought medical treatment here on his escape route into Virgini More