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Government Gunshop, U.S. Navy Yard, Washington, D.C.

description

Summary

Public domain image of an industrial building, factory, structure, works, 19th-20th century industrial revolution, free to use, no copyright restrictions - Picryl description

Was the son of Jesse Albert Graves, an early American photographer who produced nearly 500 views of the western part of Pennsylvania. C. H. Graves studied the art of photography under his father and began to practice it in Philadelphia around 1880. He founded several companies to distribute his prints, the most prominent of which was the Universal Photo Art Company, which operated from 1895 to 1910. It was based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with a branch in Naperville, Illinois, where F. A. Messerschmidt served as manager. Graves' catalogue contained nearly 1600 original views. He used a platinum printing process and some of the views were labelled The Art Nouveau (Platino) Stereograph.

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Tags

american carleton h graves government gunshop navy yard getty museum ultra high resolution high resolution gelatin silver prints industrial history washington dc
date_range

Date

1901
collections

in collections

Carleton H. Graves (1867–1943)

American photographer and publisher of stereo cards.
place

Location

Carroll Senior Citizens Center ,  38.87650, -77.00025
create

Source

J. Paul Getty Museum
link

Link

https://www.getty.edu/
copyright

Copyright info

Digital image courtesy of the Getty's Open Content Program.

label_outline Explore Carleton H Graves, Navy Yard, Gelatin Silver Prints

Latest addition to aircraft collection at Smithsonian Institution. Washington, D.C., April 6 -Scott Lucas and ...Harold Butt(?), inspect the latest addition to the aircraft collection at the Smithsonian Institution, model of the small biplane which Lincoln Beachey flew over Washington twenty-five years ago to thrill the Nation's lawmakers. He gave an exhibition of air maneuvers such as never seen before to impress members of Congress with the need of Military Preparedness. 4-6-39

A Skirmish Line., gelatin silver print

Chemical Warfare Service - Plants - Edgewood Arsenal - Stamford plant, Edgewood Arsenal, Stamford, Connecticut, formerly plant of American Synthetic Color Company. S. building looking northeast

map from "History of the American Civil War, etc"

World War I in Palestine and the Sinai

Blackwell, Oklahoma, gelatin silver print, Panoramic Photograph

Atlas to accompany Steele's American campaigns /

Spice merchants of Bag[h]dad, Company at Acre, Palestine

A black and white photo of an old building, Great Depression. FSA/OWI Photograph

Residence scene #2, Tacoma, Wash., Panoramic Photograph

Production. Tin smelting. "Bars" of pure tin are trimmed and cleaned before removal from the molds in which they were formed in a Southern smelter. All the trimmings are returned to the "pot boilers" for remelting. The plant, finest and most modern in the world, extracts the pure metal from South American ore

[Men fighting with daggers & sword while two women stand to side and woman gestures from stairs]

Topics

american carleton h graves government gunshop navy yard getty museum ultra high resolution high resolution gelatin silver prints industrial history washington dc