by Tom Sutpen, Stephen Cooke, Richard Gibson, Kimberly Lindbergs and Greg Ferrara
Showing newest posts with label And Biograph Was There . . .. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label And Biograph Was There . . .. Show older posts
October 20, 2007
And Biograph Was There . . . #3
On November 23, 1903, while dalmations and palookas in firehouses across America smoldered with envy, American Mutoscope & Biograph Co. cameraman F.S. Armitage was present as Pawtucket, Rhode Island's crack Fire Department unveiled its new, state-of-the-art firefighting equipment before a stunned citizenry.
This was posted by
Tom Sutpen
for the series:
And Biograph Was There . . .
January 18, 2007
And Biograph Was There . . . #2
On April 27, 1906, American Mutoscope and Biograph cameraman G.W. Bitzer was on hand at New York's Ellis Island to record the goings and comings of newly arrived huddled masses.
This was posted by
Tom Sutpen
for the series:
And Biograph Was There . . .
January 07, 2007
And Biograph Was There . . . #1
On October 21, 1901, American Mutoscope & Biograph Co. cameraman James Congdon captured these images of construction workers at 13th and Broadway in New York City being lowered to the ground en masse.
This was posted by
Tom Sutpen
for the series:
And Biograph Was There . . .
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