Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The George Grantham Bain Collection at the Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division comprises approximately 40,000 glass plate negatives and 50,000 photographic prints. [2] Most are scanned and have been made available online. Most date from the 1900s to the mid-1920s, but some are as early as the 1860s, and some as late as the 1930s.
The Library of Congress had reported “widespread dissatisfaction with image loss in the earlier… preservation” and resolved to recopy the paper prints to 35 mm. [7] The Library was praised for this and for not leaving anything out. The new collection of over 200 films was studied by two French film historians who visited the Library in 2003.
This image is available from the United States Library of Congress's Prints and Photographs division under the digital ID ppmsca.50554. This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal copyright tag is still required. See Commons:Licensing
This now-iconic image of the family of Sgt. Samuel Smith, an African-American soldier wearing an Abraham Lincoln campaign pin, is a featured photo on Wikimedia Commons and was donated to the Library of Congress as part of the Liljenquist Collection Unidentified soldier in Virginia Volunteer uniform and secession badge This image of A. M. Chandler and Silas Chandler was purchased from Chandler ...
The work of Johnson, a pioneering American woman in photography, were held by the Library of Congress's Prints and Photographs Division. [9] Johnston's photos of the Beaux-Arts Willard in 1901, when it expanded from 100 to 389 rooms, were the sole source available to artisans during the Willard's grand restoration eight decades later, because ...
Print/export Download as PDF; ... Harris and Ewing collection images (14 F) Media in category "Images from the Library of Congress"
The Brady-Handy collection is a historical photo archive of the United States. The collection is a cache of "mostly Civil War and post-Civil War portraits, with a small collection of Washington views" purchased by the Library of Congress in 1954, from descendants of Levin C. Handy, nephew and apprentice of photographer Mathew Brady.
Library of Congress: Prints and Photographs Division, LC-USZ62-24396. (The Conestoga wagons were first designed and built by German settlers in Pennsylvania) You cannot overwrite this file.