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A directly photographed image: Exposure mode: Auto exposure: White balance: Auto white balance: Focal length in 35 mm film: 28 mm: Scene capture type: Standard: GPS time (atomic clock) 17:43: Speed unit: Kilometers per hour: Speed of GPS receiver: 0.024802804557406: Reference for direction of image: True direction: Direction of image: 205. ...
Original file (2,048 × 1,536 pixels, file size: 795 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
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The cemetery is the final resting place for men who escaped slavery to fight in the Union Army in the Civil War, Buffalo soldiers from the Spanish-American war and matriarchs of the Black families ...
People were buried with a 'rich array' of jewellery. Home & Garden. Lighter Side
In 2019, Wooden found his mother in Lincoln Memorial Park in Miami, the neglected cemetery home to upwards of 30,000 Black Americans including lynching victims, veterans and even a few millionaires.
The cemetery was established in 1857, although the earliest burial was in 1848 (Samuel Lane) and burials of enslaved people may have taken place before 1844. [3] Of the 97 known graves, 37 of marked, many with plain fieldstone markers with no inscriptions.
Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico (1941) by Ansel Adams. Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico is a black-and-white photograph taken by Ansel Adams, late in the afternoon on November 1, 1941, [1] from a shoulder of highway US 84 / US 285 in the unincorporated community of Hernandez, New Mexico, United States. [2]