Category:1918 Human Statue of Liberty by Mole and Thomas
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Location | Fort Dodge, Webster County, Iowa | ||||
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Arthur Samuel Mole was a British-born, naturalized American commercial photographer who became famous for a series of "living photographs" made during World War I, in which tens of thousands of soldiers, reservists and other members of the military were arranged to form massive compositions. This picture was of the human Statue of Liberty; 18,000 officers and men at Camp Dodge, Des Moines, Ia.; Col. Wm. Newman, commanding; Col. Rush S. Wells
Media in category "1918 Human Statue of Liberty by Mole and Thomas"
The following 7 files are in this category, out of 7 total.
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CampDodge-HumanStatueOfLiberty1918.jpg 647 × 799; 162 KB
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Human Statue of Liberty - reverse anamorphic.jpg 219 × 280; 47 KB
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Human statue of Liberty.jpg 1,000 × 1,277; 349 KB
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MPH 56, Human Statue of Liberty.jpg 1,200 × 1,538; 468 KB
Categories:
- 1st Infantry Division (United States) in World War I
- Photographs by Arthur Mole
- Black and white photographs of Iowa
- 1918 in Iowa
- Statue of Liberty in art
- Camp Dodge
- 20th-century black and white group portrait photographs of men
- Statues in Des Moines, Iowa
- World War I homefront in Iowa
- Iconic photographs
- Black and white photographs of World War I in the United States
- Military people of the United States in 1918
- September 1918 United States photographs
- 1918 black and white portrait photographs of men