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1. American convalescent soldiers learning the slater's trade from an English woman at the big American RC Military hospital Sarisbury, Eng. Most of the patients now in the hospital are soldiers from Atlantic seaboard states, such as Georgia the Carolinas and Delaware, who were sent back to hospitals in Eng. after the St. Quentin push. They are quite at home at Sarisbury, which is staffed by a medical unit from Kentucky. The boy learning slating, however, is a Rhode Islander, Jules Jaques of Woonsocket. He was a machinist at home, bur has taken up slating working on the building operations in connection with the hospital [ca. 1918]

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19515275
2. Medical and RC staff at the "Florence Nightingale" RC Hospital, which is the American soldiers' name for the camp hospital at a big American camp somewhere in England. The hospital gets this name from the fact that it is located just across the valley from Florence Nightingale's old home. From left to right, Capt. Knox, ARC dentist, Lt. Taylor, U.S.A., Capt. William B. Belknap, ARC Lt. Wineck, U.S.A., Capt. Logan, U.S.A., Lt. Hewitt, U.S.A. Lt. Ford, U.S.A

BIBFRAME Works
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StillImage
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19514895
3. She made Chorus girls out of Doughboys. Mrs. Mabel Kipp-Lewis, formerly with Maude Adams, found her footlight experience a real asset when she took up American Red Cross work in France. She was charged with working up entertainment features for the hospital hut service and recently produced with marked success "The Isle of Azuwere" for the patients at Hyeres, a large hospital center. Her actors and actresses were all American soldiers. Mrs. Kipp-Lewis's home is in Washington D.C

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
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19501724
4. Miss Helen Scott Hay, Director of the Bureau of Nursing Instruction to lay women. Miss Hay is organizing courses in home care of the sock and home dietetics, to be given throughout the country, if women everywhere would master the elements of caring for sick members of their own families a tremendous strain on the nursing profession would be relieved, and thousands of expert nurses would be free to attend the wounded on the western front. Miss Hay was the matron of the ARC Hospital at Kiev, Russia, in 1914-1915 and at the special request of Queen Eleonora of Bulgaria, founded the first nurses' training school in Sofia. Awarded the Florence Nightingale Medal by the International Committee of the Red Cross at Geneva June 1920

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19500928
5. American convalescent soldiers learning the slater's trade from an English woman at the big American RC Military hospital Sarisbury, Eng. Most of the patients now in the hospital are soldiers from Atlantic seaboard states, such as Georgia the Carolinas and Delaware, who were sent back to hospitals in Eng. after the St. Quentin push. They are quite at home at Sarisbury, which is staffed by a medical unit from Kentucky. The boy learning slating, however, is a Rhode Islander, Jules Jaques of Woonsocket. He was a machinist at home, bur has taken up slating working on the building operations in connection with the hospital

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19515275
6. The American wounded in Hospital in London. Lieut. Walter of New York, wounded in an air fight at 12,000 feet. Eight German planes were arrayed against Chalaire and his observer, when put up a running fight and made home safely with about a hundred bullet holes in their machine. Chalaire is now in the American hospital at Dartford, on the outskirts of London. The next picture shows the bullet which saved Chalaire's life 1918

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19515048
7. United States. Congress. House. Buildings, Columbia Hospital for Women. Communication from the President of the United States transmitting supplemental estimate of appropriation for the District of Columbia for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1927, for the construction and equipment of the nurses' home for the Columbia Hospital for Women Lying-in Asylum, $ 350,000. February 19, 1927. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Text
Monograph
23165844
8. 'Sunny Brook, the Hospital inaugurated by King Edward the 7th, for the use of the British some years ago. This was taken over by the American Red Cross to house refugees from the devastated districts of the North. This home is situated at Cannes, France. The photographer hurried out to get pictures of these devils, all over 80 years of age, who keep the home always in a turmoil of aged excitement with their tricks. But notwithstanding, the charm of the beautiful climate, with orange and olive trees, palms and roses blossoming on Christmas Day, they long to get back to their own homes and have no intention of dying of old age until they can see the North again, if it keeps them alive for another generation December 1918

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19527594
9. Medical and RC staff at the "Florence Nightingale" RC Hospital, which is the American soldiers' name for the camp hospital at a big American camp somewhere in England. The hospital gets this name from the fact that it is located just across the valley from Florence Nightingale's old home. From left to right, Capt. Knox, ARC dentist, Lt. Taylor, U.S.A., Capt. William B. Belknap, ARC Lt. Wineck, U.S.A., Capt. Logan, U.S.A., Lt. Hewitt, U.S.A. Lt. Ford, U.S.A. 1918

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19514895
10. United States. Congress. House. Buildings, Columbia Hospital for Women. Communication from the President of the United States transmitting supplemental estimate of appropriation for the District of Columbia for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1927, for the construction and equipment of the nurses' home for the Columbia Hospital for Women Lying-in Asylum, $ 350,000. February 19, 1927. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed. [Washington, D.C.]: [U.S. Government Printing Office]; 1927

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 23165844
11. The American wounded in Hospital in London. Lieut. Walter of New York, wounded in an air fight at 12,000 feet. Eight German planes were arrayed against Chalaire and his observer, when put up a running fight and made home safely with about a hundred bullet holes in their machine. Chalaire is now in the American hospital at Dartford, on the outskirts of London. The next picture shows the bullet which saved Chalaire's life

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19515048
12. She made Chorus girls out of Doughboys. Mrs. Mabel Kipp-Lewis, formerly with Maude Adams, found her footlight experience a real asset when she took up American Red Cross work in France. She was charged with working up entertainment features for the hospital hut service and recently produced with marked success "The Isle of Azuwere" for the patients at Hyeres, a large hospital center. Her actors and actresses were all American soldiers. Mrs. Kipp-Lewis's home is in Washington D.C. 3 April 1919 [date received]

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19501724
13. Miss Helen Scott Hay, Director of the Bureau of Nursing Instruction to lay women. Miss Hay is organizing courses in home care of the sock and home dietetics, to be given throughout the country, if women everywhere would master the elements of caring for sick members of their own families a tremendous strain on the nursing profession would be relieved, and thousands of expert nurses would be free to attend the wounded on the western front. Miss Hay was the matron of the ARC Hospital at Kiev, Russia, in 1914-1915 and at the special request of Queen Eleonora of Bulgaria, founded the first nurses' training school in Sofia. Awarded the Florence Nightingale Medal by the International Committee of the Red Cross at Geneva

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19500928
14. United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the District of Columbia To authorize the construction of a nurses' home for the Columbia Hospital for Women and Lying-in Asylum. June 15, 1926. -- Ordered to be printed

BIBFRAME Works
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Monograph
23165250
15. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 Trudeau Sanitarium, Hachette. Simone. One of the patients who has been greatly benefitted by two months' stay here. Had "Tb." tendencies. This little girl Simone, who came to Trudeau Sanitarium, Hachette, near Paris, from a very bad home and with tubercular tendencies, is now well on her way to perfect health. The manor house of Hachette is an AMERICAN RED CROSS hospital for tubercular women. In the grounds nearby barracks have been built where about 180 children are housed, each for a period of three months or more. They are under-nourished children of tubercular tendencies, many of whom have tubercular parents. They are brought from bad living conditions in the cities and the good nourishment and outdoor life at Hachette go far to establish their health permanently September 1918

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19525733
16. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 Harry McShane, 134 B'way [i.e. Broadway], Cin. O. - 16 yrs. of age on June 29, 1908. Had his left arm pulled off near shoulder, and right leg broken through kneecap, by being caught on belt of a machine in Spring factory in May 1908. Had been working in factory more than 2 yrs. Was on his feet for first time after the accident, the day this photo was taken. No attention was paid by employers to the boy either at hospital or home according to statement of boy's father. No compensation 1908 August

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 20682904
17. Brest. Wounded man being taken aboard the U.S. hospital tug Smeaton for transportation to the home bound ship lying in the harbor at Brest. At the extreme left is a Red Cross canteen worker who serves food, drink and comforts to the wounded during the tug's trip through the harbor 29 April 1919

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19516184
18. 'Sunny Brook, the Hospital inaugurated by King Edward the 7th, for the use of the British some years ago. This was taken over by the American Red Cross to house refugees from the devastated districts of the North. This home is situated at Cannes, France. The photographer hurried out to get pictures of these devils, all over 80 years of age, who keep the home always in a turmoil of aged excitement with their tricks. But notwithstanding, the charm of the beautiful climate, with orange and olive trees, palms and roses blossoming on Christmas Day, they long to get back to their own homes and have no intention of dying of old age until they can see the North again, if it keeps them alive for another generation

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19527594
19. Lange, Dorothea Three related drought refugee families stalled on the highway near Lordsburg, New Mexico. From farms near Claremore, Oklahoma. Have been working as migratory workers in Calfornia and Arizona, now trying to get to Roswell, New Mexico, for work chopping cotton. Have car trouble and pulled up alongside the highway. "Would go back to Oklahoma but can't get along there. Can't feed the kids on what they give you (relief budget) and ain't made a crop there you might say for five years. Only other work there is fifty cents a day wages and the farmers can't pay it anyways." One of these families has lost two babies since they left their home in Oklahoma. The children, seventeen months and three years, died in the county hospital at Shafter California, from typhoid fever, resulting from unsanitary conditions in a labor camp 1937 May

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19886141
20. Lange, Dorothea Three related drought refugee families stalled on the highway near Lordsburg, New Mexico. From farms near Claremore, Oklahoma. Have been working as migratory workers in Calfornia and Arizona, now trying to get to Roswell, New Mexico, for work chopping cotton. Have car trouble and pulled up alongside the highway. "Would go back to Oklahoma but can't get along there. Can't feed the kids on what they give you (relief budget) and ain't made a crop there you might say for five years. Only other work there is fifty cents a day wages and the farmers can't pay it anyways." One of these families has lost two babies since they left their home in Oklahoma. The children, seventeen months and three years, died in the county hospital at Shafter California, from typhoid fever, resulting from unsanitary conditions in a labor camp

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19886141


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