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Chiesa protestante di Confessione Helvetica, iglesia de las confesiones helvéticas, eglise des Confessions helvétiques, Church of Helvetic Confessions (Evangelische Kirche nach Helvetischem Bekenntnis H.B.).
Evangelische Kirche nach Augustinischem Bekenntnis A.B., la chiesa protestante di Confessione augustana, la iglesia de las Confesiones de Augsburgo, l'église de la confession d'Augsbourg, the church of The Augsburg Confession
Protestant Cemetery Matzleinsdorf
Evang. A.B. parish church, Christ Church
The Protestant Cemetery Matzleinsdorf is a denominational cemetery in the 10th Vienna's district Favoriten. It is located at the beginning of this street up to No. 1 in Matzleinsdorf space (Matzleinsdorfer Platz) and is bounded on the north by the Gudrunstraße .
History
After the deaths of the two Protestant confessions A.B. and H.B. had been buried in Catholic cemeteries in Vienna until 1856, it was decided to create a separate Protestant cemetery. It was purchased a plot of land lying in front of the wall line at the edge of the former suburban Matzleinsdorf for this purpose. On 7 April 1858 the new cemetery was opened. The cemetery chapel was built by the famous architect Theophil Hansen, it was consecrated September 27nd 1860. Originally belonging to Wieden cemetery came to the division in 1861 as the new district Margarethen. Since 1874, the area is one of FavorIten (10th district). Since there were discussions about the further fate of the cemetery again, subsequently, a Protestant cemetery was established in the Vienna Central Cemetery also. But the Protestant cemetery Matzleinsdorf has survived to this day, so both cemeteries are occupied. During World War II the cemetery was badly damaged in the course of the bombings of the Southern Railway, near which it is located.
Christ Church on the Protestant cemetery in Vienna Matzleinsdorf
Interior of Christ Church
The former cemetery chapel was in 1899 a sermon station and branch church where services were held regularly. Since 1924 it is the seat of its own Protestant community AB (Lutheran), the parish church of the Evangelical Christ superintendency AB of Favoriten Vienna.
The church itself was built in the years 1858-1860 according to the plans of Theophil Hansen. Its striking appearance is reminiscent of an Orthodox church. Hansen had been based to the then at the time prevailing of historicism Byzantine style. A large dome rises above the crossing. The exterior is characterized by exposed brick and is divided by profiles and cornices. Strong cornerstones are crowned by pinnacles. Originally above the entrance was located a fresco by Carl Rahl, which showed the angel at the tomb of Christ. This image was at the beginning of the 20th Century replaced by a mosaic on a gold ground, representing the Christ with a banner.
Inside there are a total of 35 angels, mainly on the column capitals, but including under the organ loft four large, carved angel prayer, worship, teaching and preaching symbolize and remember figureheads on ships. At the spandrels beneath the dome frescoes are the symbols of the Evangelists. In 1968, Günther Baszel glass window in the chancel, showing the birth, crucifixion and resurrection of Christ. 1971 was followed by the right and left of the altar room with four other glass window depicting the Resurrection of Lazarus, the young man of Nain, the daughter of Jairus, and the story of the rich man and Lazarus. After the death Baszels 1989, the remaining four windows were added after designs by E. Bauernfeind .
Tombs of important personalities
Grave of Friedrich Hebbel
Grave of Baron Karl
The Protestant Cemetery Matzleinsdorf has a large number of celebrity graves. Many celebrities are of local importance for Vienna, and some nationally important. One can find the graves of :
Heinrich Anschütz, actor
Friedrich Ludwig Arnsburg, actor (grave abandoned)
Rudolf von Arthaber, Austrian industrialist and patron
Baron Karl, Vienna original
Günther Baszel, glass artist
Karl Isidor Beck, poet
Friedrich Beckmann, actor
O. F. Berg, writer
Friedrich Ferdinand von Beust, the Austrian Foreign Minister
Carl Binder, composer and conductor (grave abandoned)
Henry Bornstein, theater director (grave 1941 eliminated)
Adam Noble Brandner of wolf tooth (Wolfszahn) , kuk Feldmarschallleutnant, Division Commander and military commander of Cracow
Karl Ludwig von Bruck, Austrian Finance Minister
Hans Canon, Austrian painter
Ada Christians, Austrian poet
Hugo Darnaut, Austrian painter
Karl Diener, Austrian geologist and paleontologist
Friedrich Dittes, educator
Christine Enghaus, actress, wife of Friedrich Hebbel
Emil Ertl, writer and librarian
Philipp Fahrbach, Austrian composer
Carl Faulmann, Stenographer
Charles Fichtner, actor
Alfred Formey, Protestant pastor in Favoriten
Gottfried Franz, Superintendent H. B.
August Förster, actor and director
Ludwig Gabillon, actor
Zerlina Gabillon, Actress
Andreas von Gunesch, Superintendent of Vienna, Lower Austria and Central Austria
Adolf Konrad Stein Hall, Burgtheater actor
John Hardy, inventor and entrepreneur
Justus porter, superintendent and chaplain advice
Friedrich Hebbel, German writer
Fritz Hellmuth, writer
Konrad Wilhelm Hellwag, civil engineer
Christian Heyser, Superintendent
Karl Wilhelm Hilchenbach, Consistory and superintendent HB
Theodor von Hornbostel, Austrian Minister of Commerce
Bela Jenbach Operettenlibrettist (light opera librettist)
Carl Karlweis, dramatist and storyteller
Oskar Karl Weis, Austrian actor
Johann Heinrich Knoell, District Director
Elizabeth Koberwein, Austrian actress (grave already abandoned)
Rudolf Koppitz, Austrian Photographer
Fritz L' Allemand, painter
Carl von La Roche, actors
Heinrich Laube, German writer and director of the Burgtheater
Edward Leisching, art historian
Gustav Leonhardt, secretary general of the Austro-Hungarian Bank and founder of the Compass Publishing
Julius Lott, builder of the Arlberg railway
Johann Mithlinger, resistance fighter
Robert Müller, essayist
Hermann Nothnagel, Surgeon
Ernst Pauer, superintendent and director of the Protestant theologicial educational establishment
Hermann Präuscher, animal trainer and showmen
Julie Rettich, Actress
Karl Rettich, actor and theater director
Adele Sandrock, Actress
Moritz Saphir, Austrian writer
Alexander Schoeller, German industrialist and big entrepreneur in Austria
Karl Julius Schroer, literary historian
Georg Julius Schultz , Baltic German physician and writer
Lorenz von Stein, economist
Hans Thirring, Physicist
Johann Wächter, k. and k. Konsistorialrat (councillor of the consistory) and superintendent
Charles Weinberger, operetta composer
Otto Weininger, Austrian philosopher
Erich Wilhelm, Superintendent
Friedrich Wilhelmi, actor
Gottlieb August Wimmer, Pastor
Max Winter, Austrian journalist and Socialdemocrat
blue gelled strobe in car below steering wheel to cast shadow triggered manually. Lit the chaplain sticker from high in the car to cast shadow on front fender. A bit of light from natural flashlight to shadow the side mirror and window. A green gelled flashlight was used to light the area under the hood to the left of the photo.
From light painting/ night photo workshop with Troy Paiva and Joe Reifer, April 2010.
Charles Spencer Chaplin was born in Lambeth, South London on 16 April 1889, supposedly in Walworth, an area not far from East Street Market. Walworth and Lambeth officially lie within the borough of Southwark.
Description: Text on photograph, “At Wailing Wall, Jerusalem. January 1944.”
Photographer: unknown
Date: January 1944
Medium: Black and white photograph
Repository: American Jewish Historical Society
Parent Collection: National Jewish Welfare Board Military Chaplaincy Records, 1917-1983 (I-249)
Call number: aa-i249-b35-f263-032
Rights Information: No known copyright restrictions; may be subject to third party rights. For more copyright information, click here.
The original photographs found in Box 35, Folder 263 from Series IV, Subseries 4 of the National Jewish Welfare Board Military Chaplaincy records (I-249). See more information about this image and the collection by viewing the finding aid: Guide to the National Jewish Welfare Board Military Chaplaincy Records.
To inquire about rights and permissions, or if you have a question regarding the collection to which the image belongs, please contact the Reference Department of the American Jewish Historical Society by email.
Digital images created by the Gruss Lipper Digital Laboratory at the Center for Jewish History.
U.S. Army Africa Chaplain Assistant Sgt. 1st Class George Butler helps facilitate during a group break-out session during USARAF's Chaplain Directorate military-to-military exchange event with the Zambia Defense Forces Chaplaincy recently. The event focused on combat operational stress control. The nt focused on combat operational stress control. The USARAF unit ministry team facilitated discussions on combat stress, suicide prevention, moral development, and spiritual resiliency June 8-10 in Lusaka, Zambia. During the event, USARAF chaplains and their Zambian partners shared views and information on combat operational stress an other issues. The ZDF continues to conduct peace enforcement operations throughout Africa and desires to capture lessons learned from the U.S. Army Chaplaincy. (U.S. Army Africa photo)
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[Chaplain Robert Bean Sutton of the Army of Northern Virginia in uniform and after the war]
[between 1861 and 1880?]
2 photographs in 1 case : ninth-plate tintype and ninth-plate ambrotype, hand-colored ; 7.6 x 6.5 cm (case)
Notes:
Title devised by Library staff.
Case: Berg, no. 3-302; vintage case supplied by donor.
Deposit; Tom Liljenquist; 2011; (D 062).
Forms part of: Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs (Library of Congress).
Subjects:
Sutton, Robert Bean,--1826-1896--Military service.
Confederate States of America.--Army of Northern Virginia--People--1860-1870.
Soldiers--Confederate--1860-1870.
Military uniforms--Confederate--1860-1870.
Clergy--1860-1880.
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Military personnel--Confederate.
Format: Portrait photographs--1860-1880.
Tintypes--Hand-colored--1870-1880.
Ambrotypes--Hand-colored--1860-1870.
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Part Of: Ambrotype/Tintype filing series (Library of Congress) (DLC) 2010650518
Liljenquist Family collection (Library of Congress) (DLC) 2010650519
More information about this collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.lilj
Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.32087
Call Number: AMB/TIN no. 2781
Front view.
Painted using Adaptus Battlegrey rather than Chaos Black, but with 2 washes of Black Wash over the top.
Bain News Service,, publisher.
Chaplain J.K. Oheeron
[between ca. 1915 and ca. 1920]
1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.
Notes:
Title from unverified data provided by the Bain News Service on the negatives or caption cards.
Forms part of: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress).
Format: Glass negatives.
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
General information about the Bain Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.ggbain
Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ggbain.28577
Call Number: LC-B2- 4886-11
Description: Text on photograph, “Visit of Rabbi Barnett R. Brickner and Chaplain (Maj) Aryeh Lev to Chief of Chaplains prior to departure of Rabbi Brickner and Chaplain Lev overseas. From right to left: Rabbi Barnett R. Brickner, Chaplain (Brig. Gen.) William R. Arnold, Chaplain (Maj) Aryeh Lev.”
Photographer: unknown
Date: November 12, 1943
Medium: Black and white photograph
Repository: American Jewish Historical Society
Parent Collection: National Jewish Welfare Board Military Chaplaincy Records, 1917-1983 (I-249)
Call number: aa-i249-b35-f263-075
Rights Information: No known copyright restrictions; may be subject to third party rights. For more copyright information, click here.
The original photographs found in Box 35, Folder 263 from Series IV, Subseries 4 of the National Jewish Welfare Board Military Chaplaincy records (I-249). See more information about this image and the collection by viewing the finding aid: Guide to the National Jewish Welfare Board Military Chaplaincy Records.
To inquire about rights and permissions, or if you have a question regarding the collection to which the image belongs, please contact the Reference Department of the American Jewish Historical Society by email.
Digital images created by the Gruss Lipper Digital Laboratory at the Center for Jewish History.
This rune priest was a conversion of a space marine chaplain with a jump pack. I made him look a bit more wolfy by head swapping and sculpting a beard with straggly head hair (and a receeding hair line ; poor bloke!), using storm bolter arm from the bloodclaws pack, and a hammer from thunderwolf cavalry set (which will count as his runic weapon. also, the wolf skull, for me, really seals the deal that this guy is a wolfy maniac ! :D comments and suggestions welcome !
Lt. j.g. Jarrod Johnson, left, a chaplain assigned to the guided-missile cruiser USS Lake Champlain (CG 57), and Gunner's Mate 2nd Class Alvin Johnson interact with a child at the Kuda Kudhin ge Hiya neglected children's home in Villingili. Volunteers from Lake Champlain visited the center as part of a Project Handclasp community service event. Lake Champlain is part of the Boxer Expeditionary Strike Group and is on a scheduled deployment to the western Pacific Ocean supporting global maritime security.
Went for a very comic book feel with this guy. Quite different to my normal style, but I'm fairly happy with how it came out.
Description: Chaplain Nathan Landman, Air Force Jewish Chaplain for France, Spain, and Libya
Note: Text on back of photograph: Chaplain Nathan Landman, Air Force Jewish Chaplain for France, Spain, and Libya, examines the traditional Shofar (ram's horn) and other High Holy Day religious equipment prior to taking off from Evreux-Fauville Air Base to Tripoli, Libya on the first leg of a 3,000 mile circuit in which he conducted eight services at five bases before returning to Evreux for Yom Kippur. Chaplain Services Specialist M. David Cohen of Everett, Massachusetts, holds the Chaplain's kit. Left, Chaplain Nathan M. Landman, Los Angeles and New York. Right, Chaplain Service Specialist, Airman 2 Class, Mordecai David Cohen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Cohen, Everett, Massachusetts.
Photographer: unknown
Medium: black and white photograph
Date: September 2, 1964
Persistent URL: digital.cjh.org/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=211144
Repository: American Jewish Historical Society
Parent Collection: National Jewish Welfare Board Records
Call Number: I-337
Rights Information: No known copyright restrictions; may be subject to third party rights. For more copyright information, click here.
See more information about this image and others at CJH Digital Collections.
To inquire about rights and permissions, or if you have a question regarding the collection to which the image belongs, please contact the Reference Department of the American Jewish Historical Society by email.
The annual MTA Chaplain Recognition Program was held at the Charleston Bus Depot on Thu., June 17, 2015. The volunteer chaplains provide support to employees across the MTA agencies in times of need.
Photo: Marc A. Hermann / MTA New York City Transit
U.S. Army Maj. (CH) Younsoo Park, the 10th CAB chaplain, gets promoted from the rank of captain to major on Fort Drum, NY Oct. 6, 2022. Maj. Park took the Oath of Office following his promotion. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Michael Wilson)
U.S. Army Maj. (CH) Younsoo Park, the 10th CAB chaplain, gets promoted from the rank of captain to major on Fort Drum, NY Oct. 6, 2022. Maj. Park took the Oath of Office following his promotion. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Michael Wilson)
U.S. Army Maj. (CH) Younsoo Park, the 10th CAB chaplain, gets promoted from the rank of captain to major on Fort Drum, NY Oct. 6, 2022. Maj. Park took the Oath of Office following his promotion. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Michael Wilson)
What I really like about the new Asmodai is that he totally conveys everything the old model did, but he looks so much more modern and refined and just all around nice! A very easy model to paint, things just got done fast and easy on him. I really like the smoke on him and the Dark Vengeance Chaplain. That's a cool little sculpted touch to make the Chaplains stand out more.
3D red/cyan anaglyph created from glass plate stereograph at Library of Congress - Prints & Photographs Online Catalog: www.loc.gov/pictures/
Title: Harrison's Landing, Va. Group of the Irish Brigade
Date: July 1862
Photographer: Alexander Gardner (1821 - 1882)
LOC Summary: "Photo shows: (back row) Patrick Dillon, unidentified; and (front row, left to right) unidentified, James Dillon, and William Corby. The identified men are priests of the Congregation of the Holy Cross, University of Notre Dame. (Source: E. Hogan, Univ. Notre Dame Archives, 2009.) Photograph from the main eastern theater of war, the Peninsular Campaign, May-August 1862."
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Notes: Although there is conflicting information on the web as to the identities of the two "unidentified" men, the Notre Dame webpage (2nd web link below) id's them as Captain J.J. McCormick (sitting at left) and Dr. Philip O'Hanlon (standing at right). Using the Notre Dame id's, we can recap the five men pictured here as:
Sitting - Captain J.J. McCormick at left; Rev. James Dillon, Army Chaplain of the 63rd NY Regiment at center; and Rev. William Corby, Army Chaplain of the 88th NY Regiment, sitting on the right.
Standing at left is Rev. Patrick Dillon, and Dr. Philip O'Hanlon is standing at right.
William Corby (sitting at right) is of course famous for his "Absolution Under Fire," which occurred a year after this photo, at the Battle of Gettysburg, in July 1863. His actions are depicted in at least 2 historic paintings, the movie "Gettysburg," various written accounts over the years, a bronze statue on Cemetery Ridge at the Gettysburg Battlefield, and a second statue on the Notre Dame campus.
In 1893, William Corby published his account of years spent with the Irish Brigade in, "Memoirs of Chaplain Life, Three Years Chaplain in the Famous Irish Brigade, Army of the Potomac." From those memoirs, he indicates that he was taken seriously ill on or about June 18, 1862, which would have been just a few weeks before this photo was taken at Harrison's Landing in July 1862. He writes how James Dillon helped him to White House Landing and then board an army steamer to Washington. From his memoirs:
"It required nearly twenty-four hours to get me to Washington, and there under the care of the good Sisters of Charity...I lay insensible with a burning fever for three days. Persons were placed to watch me day and night. Thanks to the good medical treatment and excellent care of the "angels of sick and wounded soldiers"--the Sisters--I soon recovered. Being removed in good time from the malarial camp, no doubt helped, else I might have fallen a victim with the thousands of others who perished in the swamps of the Chickahominy..."
"....Poor Father Dillon, who so kindly assisted me in my sickness, contracted in that Army the disease that carried him to an early grave in 1868, and he now sleeps within gunshot of where I write these lines. I recovered strength rapidly and returned to my post in time to witness the disasters of the "Seven Days' Fight..."
An 1865 letter at the Notre Dame archives from Philip O'Hanlon (standing at right) to the editors of the Irish American, indicates that the two Dillon's in this photo are in fact brothers. Patrick Dillon, is pictured here (standing at left), with his right hand on the shoulder of his brother James, sitting at center. At the time of the 1865 letter, Patrick Dillon was Vice-President of Notre Dame, later he became president of Notre Dame. Like his brother James, Patrick also died of illness in 1868.
William Corby has several pages about the camp at Harrison's Landing, where this photo was taken - from his 1893 memoirs:
"The "Seven Days' Fight" was over, and we were able to get a much-desired rest of mind and body, situated as we were, in a beautiful camp at Harrison's landing on the banks of the James River. The Army of the Potomac reached this point July 2, 1862. Having left behind us the miserable swamps of the Chickahominy, where so much sickness prevailed, and where, as we have seen, many graves were made, we enjoyed beyond expression the new, clean camp, fresh water, sufficiently abundant for all purposes, and other conveniences, so much needed after fighting seven days and marching seven nights consecutively. The camp lay for miles and miles along the beautiful James River. Industry took possession of every soldier and officer, and each vied with his neighbor in beautifying his canvas house and immediate surroundings. By this time army life had grown upon us, and we felt more at home in it as we became more experienced in making ourselves comparatively comfortable. Our men were detailed by turns to build and construct lines of defense -- trenches, breastworks, abatis, etc. Others were employed in making streets, policing the camp, and much time was given to dress parades, regimental & company drills. In this way time did not hang heavily on the soldiers so as to make them dull, uneasy, and disconnected. After the day's work, the camp-fires were greatly enjoyed, and around them were many scenes of interest. At these fires were recounted tales of the bravery of companions who fell in the late terrific contests....
Good brass bands in the camp lent a most agreeable service. While the soldiers enjoyed their campfire chats, the bands were playing at various points and gave a romantic charm to the situation. Picture to yourself thousands of white tents among beautiful green trees, with the fires glimmering here and there for miles over an extended plain, furnishing light and comfort to over a hundred thousand armed men, while darkness gently spread its mantle over all. As the hours creep into the night, the campfires show to more advantage, especially when you can imagine how the scene is animated by varied conversations -- some droll and witty, some grave and touching, many concerning the great, sublime future. In this you have a faint picture of our camp at night.
Here we spent about one month very profitably employed. Our new base of supplies was excellent, and we received a quantity of fresh food; we even got bread--real bread--in place of "hardtack." Besides this, the soldiers were dressed in new suits, and everything was very clean. This was a good preparation for the hardship and privations that were to follow....."
One final note about the location of this photo at Harrison's Landing, it's the same locale as the well-known "Berkeley Plantation," a Virginia and National Historic landmark. I remember visiting there with my parents as a young boy, but at that age I had not an inkling as to the significance of the place....so I definitely need to go back for a visit to absorb it all and take some 3D photos. A brief excerpt from their homepage:
"...Berkeley’s 1726 Georgian mansion is the birthplace of Benjamin Harrison V, signer of the Declaration of Independence and three times governor of Virginia. The estate is also the birthplace of William Henry Harrison, ninth president of the United States, and ancestral home of his grandson, Benjamin Harrison, the twenty-third president. During the Civil War, Berkeley was occupied by General George McClellan’s Union troops. While at Berkeley, General Daniel Butterfield composed the familiar tune “Taps,” first played by his bugler, O.W. Norton...."
Link to Berkeley Plantation website: www.berkeleyplantation.com/index.html
Link to Notre Dame webpage on William Corby, including the painting "Absolution Under Fire": www.archives.nd.edu/about/news/index.php/2013/corby-getty...
Link to free copy of William Corby's, "Memoirs of Chaplain Life, Three Years Chaplain in the Famous Irish Brigade, Army of the Potomac" at archive.org: archive.org/details/04368556.3060.emory.edu
Link to NARA webpage - Faith on the Firing Line, Army Chaplains in the Civil War:
www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2016/spring/chapla...
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Red/Cyan (not red/blue) glasses of the proper density must be used to view 3D effect without ghosting. Anaglyph prepared using red cyan glasses from The Center For Civil War Photography / Civil War Trust.
Chaplain (Maj.) Allen Staley (center left) and Chaplain (Maj.) Leo Moenkedick (center right) take time for a photo opportunity with seminar attendees.
Staley and Moekendick recently held a week-long seminar on dealing with combat stress for more than 40 Ghana Armed Forces personnel consisting mainly of chaplains and a small contingent of mental health professionals. (Ghana Armed Forces photo)
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The Rev. Matt Hall hikes through a grove of rhododendron on the Appalachian Trail near Pearisburg, Va. Hall serves as a United Methodist chaplain appointed to the trail community. Photo by Mike DuBose, UMNS.
Chaplains of all faiths served a multitude of military bases and remote locations throughout the war zone, often using the hood of their Jeep, ammunition cases, or ration boxes as altars. This portable military chaplain's kit was used by a Jewish rabbi during the Vietnam War. Its contents, including torah scrolls (behind the curtains), candles and candlesticks, kiddush cup, yad, and prayer books, along with a chaplain's flag, could all be stored inside the collapsible case.
Loan courtesy of St. Louis Jewish War Veterans Memorial Centre. Photo courtesy of Soldiers Memorial Military Museum.
Local accession number: 13_05_000255
Title: Chaplain Manning [front]
Statement of responsibility: Carte de visite by Silsbee, Case & Co., photographic artists, 299 1/2 Washington Street, Boston
Creator/Contributor: Silsbee, Case & Co. (Photographer)
Genre: Photographs; Cartes de visite; Portraits
Date created: 1859-1870 (approximate)
Physical description: 1 photograph : print on card mount ; mount 11 x 7 cm (carte de visite format)
General notes: Title from item or from accompanying material.; On item envelope: Jacob M. Manning.
Date notes: Date supplied by cataloger.
Subjects: Chaplains; Military personnel; Manning, Jacob M. (Jacob Merrill), 1824-1882
Collection: Cartes de Visite Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known copyright restrictions.
U.S. Army Capt. Gerald Woodford, center, a chaplain, from 18th Combat Services Support Battalion, takes a photo, with Iraqi school children, while the Iraqi army soldiers, from 3rd Battalion, 5th Brigade, 2nd Division, hand out school supplies, to children at Sharif Al Rudha Primary School, in Domiz Somer, Mosul, Iraq, Oct. 9, 2008. (U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Sarah De Boise/Released)
Learn more: www.expertinfantry.com