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The Washington Bridge with wetlands and railroad tracks in foreground, Harlem River, New York City, undated

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  2. New-York Historical Society, Photographs of New York City and Beyond
In New-York Historical Society, Photographs of New York City and Beyond

Title

The Washington Bridge with wetlands and railroad tracks in foreground, Harlem River, New York City, undated

Creators and Contributors

  • Creator: Stonebridge, George Ehler

Date Created

Institutional Owner

New-York Historical Society, 170 Central Park West, New York, NY 10024, 212-873-3400

Rights

This digital image may be used for educational or scholarly purposes without restriction. Commercial and other uses of the item are prohibited without prior written permission from the New-York Historical Society. Please visit the New-York Historical Society's Rights and Reproductions Department web page at http://www.nyhistory.org/about/rights-reproductions for more information.

Type of Resource

Photograph

Language

English

Additional Information

General note:

Photographer Note: George Ehler Stonebridge (d. 1941) was an amateur photographer who lived and worked in the Bronx, New York. He left little record of himself, but an invaluable one of his surroundings and interests. Stonebridge lived at several locations in the Bronx with his wife Bella, and their three children Grace, George, and William. He worked at the Northern Gaslight Company, although the position he held is unknown. In addition to taking photographs, Stonebridge wrote poetry and prose about his love of the Bronx, his children, and in honor of military victories. Some of Stonebridge's photographs appeared in local papers. In 1898, he was an authorized reporter and photographer for the North Side News; in 1905 he was an authorized reporter for the Bronx Borough Record and Times, and probably took photographs for that paper as well. Stonebridge was fascinated with the subject of military preparedness. Training rituals and staged battles were one of his favorite photographic subjects. His 1898 poem, "Remember the Maine," celebrates the United States' victory in the Spanish-American War. He was especially proud of soldiers from the Bronx, and photographed historical tablets throughout the Borough commemorating previous military victories. Stonebridge also used his photographs to illustrate lectures. In 1907, he gave several lectures on "The Training of War," using colored lantern slides.

Extent:
4 x 5"
  • Bridges--New York (State)--New York--Photographs
  • Harlem River (N.Y.)--Photographs
  • Bronx (New York, N.Y.)--Photographs
  • New York (N.Y.)--Photographs
  • Washington Bridge (New York, N.Y.)
  • Glass negatives
  • Negatives (photographic)

MODS 3.7 Dublin Core GeoJSON IIIF Presentation Manifest 3.0 IIIF Presentation Manifest 2.1

Direct Link to Digital Object's IIIF Presentation Manifest V3

Linked Data for this Object

Library Of Congress subjects
  • Bridges
  • Photographs
LCNAF Geographic Names
  • New York (State)
  • New York (N.Y.)
  • Harlem River (N.Y.)
  • Bronx (New York, N.Y.)
  • Washington Bridge (New York, N.Y.)
Getty terms
  • glass plate negatives
  • negatives (photographs)

Geolocated data for this Object

Geolocation data not provided

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