View allAll Photos Tagged ChildWelfare
April is Child Abuse Awareness month. pretty much on my heart this month. i plan to do more for this cause one day. i wish i could do more now.
to view large
www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZt7J0iaUD0
Child Abuse in America
Children are suffering from a hidden epidemic of child abuse and neglect. Every year 3.3 million reports of child abuse are made in the United States involving nearly 6 million children (a report can include multiple children). The United States has the worst record in the industrialized nation – losing five children every day due to abuse-related deaths.
A report of child abuse is made every ten seconds
*More than five children die every day as a result of child abuse.
Approximately 80% of children that die from abuse are under the age of 4.
It is estimated that between 50-60% of child fatalities due to maltreatment are not recorded as such on death certificates.
More than 90% of juvenile sexual abuse victims know their perpetrator in some way.
Child abuse occurs at every socioeconomic level, across ethnic and cultural lines, within all religions and at all levels of education.
About 30% of abused and neglected children will later abuse their own children, continuing the horrible cycle of abuse. 5
About 80% of 21 year olds that were abused as children met criteria for at least one psychological disorder.
This Dutch children’s charity stamp was issued in 1949 as part of the well-known For the Child series. The design depicts a young child holding flowers, symbolizing care, hope, and protection of children in the post-war period. The surcharge added to the postal value was donated to organizations supporting child welfare and social aid. Since 1924, Dutch children’s stamps have played an important role in both social support and philatelic history.
Homeless barefoot boys sleep huddled over a grating for warmth. Based on a photograph by social reformer Jacob Riis. Original image in the public domain from the Museum of the City of New York. Colorized by Kelly Short using Gimp 2.6.11.
The left boy has snow on his hat and coat sleeve, and a chunk of ice is perched on his wrist. These details are in the original black and white version, which may also be viewed in this photostream. Adding color improved contrast, making the snow and ice easier to see. Some sources suggest that the photographer posed these children, but it's difficult to understand why a boy would leave these cold artifacts on his body and clothing if he were awake. Although the colors I've added are based on conjecture, the suffering here was real and stark.
Three homeless boys do a poor job of pretending to be asleep. Nevertheless, their ragged, grimy condition offers evidence that they are not pretending to be desperately poor. Jacob A. Riis Collection (#122), Museum of the City of New York.
Making the most out of a warm spot on a snow-covered street, homeless barefoot boys sleep piled atop a grated vent hole on Manhattan's lower east side. Based on the original image by Jacob Riis, from the Jacob A. Riis Collection (#123), Museum of the City of New York. Processed and colorized by Kelly Short using Gimp 2.6.11.
Making the most out of a warm spot on a snow-covered street, three homeless barefoot boys sleep piled atop a grated vent hole on Manhattan's lower east side. Photo by Jacob Riis. From the Jacob A. Riis Collection (#123), Museum of the City of New York.
Vintage Dutch semi-postal stamp featuring a young child holding a toy drum. Issued with a face value of 30 cents plus a 15-cent charity surcharge, this stamp supported child welfare initiatives in the Netherlands. The sober sepia tone and photographic style reflect the social and cultural spirit of the mid-20th century.
Too poor to buy shoes, a ten-year-old girl squeezes out a meager living as a spinner in a cotton mill. (Image by Lewis W. Hine via the Metropolitan Museum of New York. Processed and colorized by Kelly Short using Gimp 2.6.11).
Her childhood stolen by the Great Depression, a young resident of a shack town manages a slight smile in spite of living on the verge of starvation. (Photo by Dorothea Lange via Wikimedia).
Local call number: SBH0076
Title:Baby with a pipe
Date: CA 1935
Physical descrip: 1 photoprint - b&w - 7 x 5 in.
Series Title: State Board of Health
Repository: State Library and Archives of Florida, 500 S. Bronough St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 USA. Contact: 850.245.6700. Archives@dos.myflorida.com
Persistent URL: floridamemory.com/items/show/44553
Her childhood stolen by the Great Depression, a young resident of a shack town manages a slight smile in spite of living on the verge of starvation. (Original photo by Dorothea Lange via Wikimedia has been processed and colorized by Kelly Short using Gimp 2.6.11).
Three homeless boys do a poor job of pretending to be asleep. Nevertheless, their ragged, grimy condition offers evidence that they are not pretending to be desperately poor. Based on the original black and white image taken by Jacob Riis. Jacob A. Riis Collection (#122), Museum of the City of New York. Processed and colorized by Kelly Short using Gimp 2.6.11.
April is Child Abuse Awareness month. (getting a head start since baby is due soon and i might not have the time to do this one.... been wanting to do this image for a while...)
Texture is from Leigh's fine texture pack, 'burst B&W' .(thanks Leigh, they ROCK!) and scratchy texture complements from Rosie. (thanks Rosie!:) )
Too poor to buy shoes, a ten-year-old girl squeezes out a meager living as a spinner in a cotton mill. (Public domain image by Lewis W. Hine via the Metropolitan Museum of New York).
Pictures on Flickr reminded me that I had overlooked a very powerful social medium. So, here's my contribution. The children in the picture are from the African Children's Choir, a group in Uganda (children are from that country, as well as South Africa, Zambia, and Zimbabwe). They are orphans, having lost their parents to AIDS. Yet, they show an astonishing spirit, which they express in some of the most beautiful music I have ever heard.
Child laborer Sadie Pfeiffer tends a thread-spinning frame in a North Carolina textile mill. The height of the machine compared to Sadie, along with the enormous distance between her and the girl in the background, emphasizes the minute size and resulting vulnerability of the child in a dangerous factory environment. Photo by Lewis W. Hine via Wikimedia.
there is a lot more of how they supervise access and let the mother abuse all children they just watch and nothing else your tax dollars hard at work . www.flickr.com/groups/boycottwendysrestaurants/
Title: (For Child Welfare Exhibit 1912-13.) Overcrowded home of workers in cotton mill, Olneyville, Providence. Eight persons live in these three small rooms, three of them are boarders. Inner bed-rooms are 9 x 8 feet, the largest room 12 x 12 feet. 23 Chaffee Street, Polish People. Property owned by the mill. Rent $4.50 a month. Location: Providence, Rhode Island.
Creator(s): Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940, photographer
Date Created/Published: 1912 November.
Medium: 1 photographic print.
Reproduction Number: LC-DIG-nclc-02722 (color digital file from b&w original print) LC-USZ62-29101 (b&w film copy negative)
Rights Advisory: No known restrictions on publication.
Call Number: LOT 7479, v. 5, no. 3191 [P&P]
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Notes:
Title from NCLC caption card.
Attribution to Hine based on provenance.
In album: Mills.
Hine no. 3191.
General information about the Lewis Hine child labor photos is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.nclc
Subjects:
Textile industry.
Women.
Children.
Labor housing.
Polish Americans.
United States--Rhode Island--Providence.
Format:
Photographic prints.
Collections:
National Child Labor Committee Collection
Part of: Photographs from the records of the National Child Labor Committee (U.S.)
Bookmark This Record:
www.loc.gov/pictures/item/ncl2004003753/PP/
Photo Credit: Library of Congress, LC-DIG-nclc-02722
Children's Bureau Publication
"Child Welfare News Summary"
U.S. Department of Labor
January 12, 1929
Topics: General Child Welfare
Recent Publications
A selected list of books for parents and teachers
Child Study Discussion Records
Note: This document was scanned from the bound collection found at Regenstein Library at the University of Chicago. This should be public domain because it is an early Children's Bureau publication.
Children's Bureau Publication
"Child Welfare News Summary" March 27, 1926
Topics: Congressional Legislation affecting Child Welfare
Mental Hygiene
Note: This document was scanned from the bound collection found at Regenstein Library at the University of Chicago. This should be public domain because it is an early Children's Bureau publication.
A mixture of frowns and smiles on the faces of child miners. The soot on their faces makes the viewer wonder what's gotten into their lungs. (Photo by Lewis W. Hine via Wikimedia).
Children's Bureau Publication
"Child Welfare News Summary" January 12, 1929
U.S. Department of Labor
Topics: General Child Welfare
Recent Publications
Note: This document was scanned from the bound collection found at Regenstein Library at the University of Chicago. This should be public domain because it is an early Children's Bureau publication.
Indigenous communities will have greater involvement in child-welfare decisions to help keep their children out of care, safe in their home communities, and connected to their cultures under proposed legislation changes announced by the Ministry of Children and Family Development (MCFD).
Read more: news.gov.bc.ca/16928
A plea to save a child from an “immoral” woman immigrant fell on deaf ears on 2 February 1886.
A Mrs Freeman, acting on behalf of an English children’s aid society in Manchester, had given an orphaned girl into the care of an adoptive mother, Mrs Davies, who was immigrating to New Zealand with her husband. Mrs Freeman was also on the ship and noticed that Mrs Davies had taken up with a new partner and was now calling herself Gertie Stewart. Mrs Freeman was not impressed and told her she had lost all right to the child because of her “immoral conduct”. A bargain was struck at sea when the beleaguered Gertie agreed to hand the child back to Mrs Freeman when they landed. But instead she smuggled her off the ship and out of the reach of her would-be saviour. Mrs Freeman asked the Police and the Ministry of Justice to save the child from the influence of the “immoral” Gertie Stewart: “For the dear child’s sake I ask you to do this as it is better to prevent one going wrong than rescue them after they have fallen.” But she was told that unless the child was found destitute there was little anyone could do.
Shown here is the government memo on the recommended reply to Mrs Freeman. The fate of the child is unknown
J1 393 ak 1886211
collections.archives.govt.nz/web/arena/search#/?q=R24529257
For updates on our On This Day series and news from Archives New Zealand, follow us on Twitter www.twitter.com/ArchivesNZ
Material supplied by Archives New Zealand.
Children's Bureau Publication
"Child Welfare News Summary" December 20, 1924]
U.S. Department of Labor
Topic: General Child Welfare
Note: This document was scanned from the bound collection found at Regenstein Library at the University of Chicago. This should be public domain because it is an early Children's Bureau publication.
Celebrating the opening of the Parents Legal Centre at the Vancouver Law Courts. The Parents Legal Centre offers a range of support services for parents who are involved with child welfare authorities.
Left to right: Minister of Children and Family Development Stephanie Cadieux, Attorney General and Minister of Justice Suzanne Anton and Tom Christensen, Chair of the Legal Services Society for
Learrn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2015/03/new-centre-helps-parents-r...
"Grace Abbott was a well-known American social reformer, teacher, and writer during the first half of the twentieth century. Abbott was born in Grand Island, Nebraska on November 17, 1878. Grace Abbott is the sister of Edith Abbott, who is also a well-know social reformer. Both sisters were influenced by their mother's avid belief in equal rights for women (Lengermann& Niebrugge-Brantly 1998). This gives obvious reasoning to the fact that both sisters made a tremendous impact on social welfare, during this time period when social living was not at it's highest standards.
Abbott attended the Grand Island Baptist College, and went on to teach high school in Grand Island and in Broken Bow, Nebraska. In 1907, she left for Chicago to continue her education at the University of Chicago. In 1909, Abbott received her master of philosophy degree from the University of Chicago.
Abbott began her social work career in 1908, working with immigrants at the Hull House in Chicago, where she was a resident from 1908-1917. For nine years, she worked as the director of the Immigrants Protective League, which was a program designed to help immigrants adjust to their new life, and protect them from mistreatment. She held this position until 1917. From this experience with working with immigrants, she wrote several books, including The Immigrant and His Community, which was published in 1917 (Lengermann& Niebrugge-Brantly, 1998).
Concerned about the welfare of children and infants, particularly the low pay and long hours required of children working in factories, Abbott became a leader in the fight for federal legislation protecting children's rights. In 1917, she became the director of the Industrial Division of the Children's Bureau of the U.S. Department of Labor. This position made her responsible for developing enforcement plans for the first federal child labor law passed by Congress in 1916. After being given proper authority, Abbott directed an investigation of a majority of the shipbuilding plants on the Atlantic coast, Gulf of Mexico, and the Great Lakes. This inspection was performed in 1919.
Her concern for the welfare of children also enabled her to get the Sheppard-Towner Act passed into law. This act allowed for federal and state aid for mothers and children. This law provided the first federal grants to aid the social welfare of children. This law also authorized government cooperation with the states in promoting maternal and child health. In 1921 President Warren Harding appointed Abbott as head of the Children's Bureau in the Department of Labor. As head of the Bureau, Abbott administered the Sheppard-Towner Act provisions. She continued as head of the Bureau until 1934 when she resigned and became a public welfare professor at the University of Chicago.
Abbott's concern for child welfare inspired her to write a book entitled Child and the State. This book, written by Abbott herself, concentrates on dependent children and the aid the state is liable to pay. Not only does it look at what the state was currently responsible for, but also how they can more adequately meet the needs of dependant children.
Another important aspect the book covers is state aid to single mothers' of dependant children. Abbott states the fact that aid should be provided for low-income women with children. She believed that with proper financial aid, women would be more likely to raise and educate their children (Abbott, 1938).
Abbott was also responsible for including social statistics and research into legislative policy- making. Her leadership helped fund more than one hundred social research investigations and publications, usually administered by the School of Social Service Administration. Some of the important research includes: "Maternal Morality in 15 States", " Children in Agriculture", " Children in Street Work"' " Illegally Employed Minors and Workmen's Compensation"' and " Youth and Crime". Abbott also took advantage of television and radio to make others informed about the best methods of childcare and kept the public informed about the state's responsibility for child welfare.
Another accomplishment achieved by Abbott was the development of systems for collecting data from the state child labor, juvenile delinquency, and statistics on the work of local private and public agencies. In 1920 Abbott responded to the depression by advocating for federal aid for relief, and was responsible for collecting and distributing relief reports from 203 cities, to national agencies.
From 1922 to 1934, Grace Abbott served as the official representative of the U.S. on the League of Nations' advisory committee on child welfare. She was the President of the National Conference of Social Work in Paris. This was the first conference on social work ever held. From 1930 to 1931, Abbott established wide spread support for the position as Secretary of Labor in the President's cabinet and in 1931 she was named one of the "Twelve Greatest Living American Women" in a nation wide poll conducted by a popular women's magazine.
In 1934, Grace Abbott resigned as chief of the Children's Bureau. Upon her resignation, Franklin D. Roosevelt portrayed her career as one of "inestimable value to the children, the mothers, and the fathers of the country, as well as to the Federal and State governments."
From 1934 until her death, Abbott remained active in the field of social work. She held a professorship at SSA and was the editor of the Social Service Review. During these years Abbott also served on President Roosevelt's council on economic security and helped to draft the Social Security Act. She also continued to chair international labor conferences and state committees dealing with the issue of child labor.
On June 19, 1939, Grace Abbott died in Chicago (Kirkland, 1989). For thirty years Abbott fought for child labor, juvenile delinquency, and for the immigrants in our country. Abbott had been named one of America's Most distinguished Women by Good Housekeeping in 1931. Also a children's playground park in Grand Island was named in the honor of Grace Abbott. Abbott was also voted into the Nebraska Hall of Fame in 1976." - www.webster.edu/~woolflm/gabbott.html
Children's Bureau Publication
"Child Welfare News Summary" January 12, 1929
U.S. Department of Labor
Topic: General Child Welfare
Note: This document was scanned from the bound collection found at Regenstein Library at the University of Chicago. This should be public domain because it is an early Children's Bureau publication.
Celebrating the opening of the Parents Legal Centre at the Vancouver Law Courts. The Parents Legal Centre offers a range of support services for parents who are involved with child welfare authorities.
Left to right: Minister of Children and Family Development Stephanie Cadieux, Attorney General and Minister of Justice Suzanne Anton and Tom Christensen, Chair of the Legal Services Society for
Learrn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2015/03/new-centre-helps-parents-r...
Collection:
Images from the History of Medicine (NLM)
Title:
[Public Health: A child with influenza, her mother, and a visiting nurse from a local Child Welfare Association]
Publication Information:
May, 1919.
Appears In:
Public health nurse quarterly, v. XI, n. 5, oppo. p. 335.
Copyright Statement:
The National Library of Medicine believes this item to be in the public domain.
Order No.:
A012505
Physical Description:
1 photomechanical reproduction : halftone.
Image Description:
A child with influenza lies in bed, attended by her mother and a visiting nurse (from a local Child Welfare Association?).
Note (General):
Old Negative no. 76-44
Restrictions on Access:
HMD provides access to digital images in lieu of originals when electronic copies exist. Access to originals may require advance notice. Please see HMD Reference Librarian for more information.
URL:
Record UI:
101434397
NOTE: Anyone other the Children's Bureau, must go directly to this site for licensing.
Contact:
Ginny A. Roth
Ginny.Roth@nih.gov
Here is the information for Light, Inc. to order high resolution TIF files for publication:
Light, Inc.
12160-A Tech Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-1914
E-mail: nlm.requests@yahoo.com
Phone: (301) 680-9700
Fax: (301) 680-0575
Just make sure you provide the order number for the image when making a request (e.g. A013630).
For credit lines, please use, "Courtesy of the National Library of Medicine." If it is a WHO (World Health Organization) image, please add the additional line, "Photo by the World Health Organization." Sometimes they list a photographer in the data record and if so, I recommend adding the name of the photographer as well (e.g., Photo by P. Larsen, World Health Organization).
Photo Credit: National Library of Medicine
Collection:
Images from the History of Medicine (NLM)
Title:
Chamisal, New Mexico July 1940 Spanish-American girl/ Russell Lee.
Contributor (Organization):
United States. Farm Security Administration.
Contributor (Organization):
United States. Children's Bureau.
Creator:
Lee, Russell, 1903
Subject (Keyword):
Hispanic Americans
Girls
Chamisal (N.M.)
Subject (Genre):
Portraits
Subject (MeSH Term):
Child
Publication Information:
1940 July.
Copyright Statement:
The National Library of Medicine believes this item to be in the public domain.
Order No.:
A030369
Physical Description:
1 photographic print : b&w.
Image Description:
Half-length portrait, facing front, of young girl.
Note (General):
On recto: Classification: Portrait -- 6-12
Note (General):
On recto: Negative no. FSA-12835-MI
Note (General):
On verso: U.S. Department of Labor, Children's Bureau
Note (General):
From the collection of Children's Bureau photographs related to health and human services and child welfare.
Restrictions on Access:
HMD provides access to digital images in lieu of originals when electronic copies exist. Access to originals may require advance notice. Please see HMD Reference Librarian for more information.
URL:
Call Number:
WA 320 C25 box 15 sub
Record UI:
101448384
NOTE: Anyone other the Children's Bureau, must go directly to this site for licensing.
Contact:
Ginny A. Roth
Ginny.Roth@nih.gov
Here is the information for Light, Inc. to order high resolution TIF files for publication:
Light, Inc.
12160-A Tech Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-1914
E-mail: nlm.requests@yahoo.com
Phone: (301) 680-9700
Fax: (301) 680-0575
Just make sure you provide the order number for the image when making a request (e.g. A013630).
For credit lines, please use, "Courtesy of the National Library of Medicine." If it is a WHO (World Health Organization) image, please add the additional line, "Photo by the World Health Organization." Sometimes they list a photographer in the data record and if so, I recommend adding the name of the photographer as well (e.g., Photo by P. Larsen, World Health Organization).
Photo Credit: National Library of Medicine
Note: This image was originally part of the Children's Bureau Collection!
This image is excerpted from a U.S. GAO report:
www.gao.gov/products/GAO-13-170
CHILD WELFARE: States Use Flexible Federal Funds, But Struggle to Meet Service Needs
Celebrating the opening of the Parents Legal Centre at the Vancouver Law Courts. The Parents Legal Centre offers a range of support services for parents who are involved with child welfare authorities.
Left to right: Minister of Children and Family Development Stephanie Cadieux, Attorney General and Minister of Justice Suzanne Anton and Tom Christensen, Chair of the Legal Services Society for
Learrn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2015/03/new-centre-helps-parents-r...
Celebrating the opening of the Parents Legal Centre at the Vancouver Law Courts. The Parents Legal Centre offers a range of support services for parents who are involved with child welfare authorities.
Left to right: Minister of Children and Family Development Stephanie Cadieux and Attorney General and Minister of Justice Suzanne Anton
Learrn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2015/03/new-centre-helps-parents-r...
The 90,000-strong Métis community in British Columbia is one step closer to taking over child welfare authority for their children and families, with the historic signing of an agreement between the Métis Nation British Columbia (MNBC) and the Province.
Read more: news.gov.bc.ca/17344
The 90,000-strong Métis community in British Columbia is one step closer to taking over child welfare authority for their children and families, with the historic signing of an agreement between the Métis Nation British Columbia (MNBC) and the Province.
Read more: news.gov.bc.ca/17344
Celebrating the opening of the Parents Legal Centre at the Vancouver Law Courts. The Parents Legal Centre offers a range of support services for parents who are involved with child welfare authorities.
Left to right: Minister of Children and Family Development Stephanie Cadieux and Tom Christensen, Chair of the Legal Services Society for
Learrn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2015/03/new-centre-helps-parents-r...
Smiling in spite of the enormity of the injustice he faced and the loss he experienced, this boy illustrates the price of child labor. He also puts to shame any tendency the average person might have to feel sorry for himself. (Photo by Lewis W. Hine via George Eastman House).
The health of your baby is extremely important. Parents should be fully aware of the various stages of their child’s growth. If there are any considerable delays in a baby’s normal growth plan, parents should immediately consult a paediatrician.
Collection:
Images from the History of Medicine (NLM)
Title:
Carolyn Bennett Sawyer 5 months/ Bonn.
Contributor (Organization):
United States. Children's Bureau.
Creator:
Bonn, Philip.
Subject (Keyword):
Infant Behavior
Child Development
Play and Playthings
Publication Information:
[194-]
Copyright Statement:
The National Library of Medicine believes this item to be in the public domain.
Order No.:
A030482
Physical Description:
1 photographic print : b&w ; 24 x 19 cm.
Image Description:
Female infant lying on her stomach on a blanket; she is holding her head up, and grasps a rattle in her right hand.
Note (General):
From the collection of Children's Bureau photographs related to health and human services and child welfare.
Note_General
On recto: Classification: Infant -- Growth & development.
On verso: U.S. Department of Labor, Children's Bureau.
Restrictions on Access:
HMD provides access to digital images in lieu of originals when electronic copies exist. Access to originals may require advance notice. Please see HMD Reference Librarian for more information.
URL:
Call Number:
WA 320 C25 box 15 sub
Record UI:
101448348
NOTE: Anyone other the Children's Bureau, must go directly to this site for licensing.
Contact:
Ginny A. Roth
Ginny.Roth@nih.gov
Here is the information for Light, Inc. to order high resolution TIF files for publication:
Light, Inc.
12160-A Tech Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-1914
E-mail: nlm.requests@yahoo.com
Phone: (301) 680-9700
Fax: (301) 680-0575
Just make sure you provide the order number for the image when making a request (e.g. A013630).
For credit lines, please use, "Courtesy of the National Library of Medicine." If it is a WHO (World Health Organization) image, please add the additional line, "Photo by the World Health Organization." Sometimes they list a photographer in the data record and if so, I recommend adding the name of the photographer as well (e.g., Photo by P. Larsen, World Health Organization).
Photo Credit: National Library of Medicine
Note: This was originally part of the Children's Bureau collection!
National Reunification Month Reception and Policy Discussion at the Capitol Hill Visitor's Center Congressional Auditorium on June 17th, 2015. The event was hosted by the Annie E. Casey Foundation and its co-sponsors, in partnership with POV. Segments from 'Tough Love' (POV 2015) were shown to highlight the challenges and opportunities for parents seeking to reunite with children in foster care.
Credit: POV | American Documentary
Collection:
Images from the History of Medicine (NLM)
Title:
8-month-old infant born prematurely weighed 3 pounds, 10 ounces at birth.
Contributor (Organization):
United States. Children's Bureau.
Subject (Keyword):
Infant, Premature growth & development
Publication Information:
[194-]
Copyright Statement:
The National Library of Medicine believes this item to be in the public domain.
Order No.:
A030491
Physical Description:
1 photographic print : b&w ; 24 x 20 cm.
Image Description:
Full-length portrait from above of infant lying on her back; a tape measure is stretched out next to her.
Note (General):
On recto: Classification: Infants -- growth & development
On verso: U.S. Department of Labor, Children's Bureau
Note (General):
From the collection of Children's Bureau photographs related to health and human services and child welfare.
Restrictions on Access:
HMD provides access to digital images in lieu of originals when electronic copies exist. Access to originals may require advance notice. Please see HMD Reference Librarian for more information.
URL:
Call Number:
WA 320 C25 box 15 sub
Record UI:
101448357
NOTE: Anyone other the Children's Bureau, must go directly to this site for licensing.
Contact:
Ginny A. Roth
Ginny.Roth@nih.gov
Here is the information for Light, Inc. to order high resolution TIF files for publication:
Light, Inc.
12160-A Tech Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-1914
E-mail: nlm.requests@yahoo.com
Phone: (301) 680-9700
Fax: (301) 680-0575
Just make sure you provide the order number for the image when making a request (e.g. A013630).
For credit lines, please use, "Courtesy of the National Library of Medicine." If it is a WHO (World Health Organization) image, please add the additional line, "Photo by the World Health Organization." Sometimes they list a photographer in the data record and if so, I recommend adding the name of the photographer as well (e.g., Photo by P. Larsen, World Health Organization).
Photo Credit: National Library of Medicine
Note: This was originally part of the Children's Bureau Collection!
Collection:
Images from the History of Medicine (NLM)
Title:
Dean Salon -- 11 months old.
Creator:
Bonn, Philip.
Subject (Keyword):
Infant Behavior
Child Development
Subject (MeSH Term):
Infant
Publication Information:
[194-]
Copyright Statement:
The National Library of Medicine believes this item to be in the public domain.
Order No.:
A030464
Physical Description:
1 photographic print : b&w ; 24 x 20 cm.
Image Description:
Infant (full-length portrait, facing back) reaching upward toward a toy sitting on a coffee table.
Note (General):
From the collection of Children's Bureau photographs related to health and human services and child welfare.
Note (General):
On recto: Classification: Infants -- Growth and development.
On verso: U.S. Department of Labor, Children's Bureau.
Restrictions on Access:
HMD provides access to digital images in lieu of originals when electronic copies exist. Access to originals may require advance notice. Please see HMD Reference Librarian for more information.
URL:
Call Number:
WA 320 C25 box 15 sub
Record UI:
101448330
NOTE: Anyone other the Children's Bureau, must go directly to this site for licensing.
Contact:
Ginny A. Roth
Ginny.Roth@nih.gov
Here is the information for Light, Inc. to order high resolution TIF files for publication:
Light, Inc.
12160-A Tech Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-1914
E-mail: nlm.requests@yahoo.com
Phone: (301) 680-9700
Fax: (301) 680-0575
Just make sure you provide the order number for the image when making a request (e.g. A013630).
For credit lines, please use, "Courtesy of the National Library of Medicine." If it is a WHO (World Health Organization) image, please add the additional line, "Photo by the World Health Organization." Sometimes they list a photographer in the data record and if so, I recommend adding the name of the photographer as well (e.g., Photo by P. Larsen, World Health Organization).
Photo Credit: National Library of Medicine
Note: This image was originally part of the Children's Bureau Collection!