View allAll Photos Tagged classphoto

in Krefeld (Germany) 1934

0nly my mother, born 1925 (below right) is still living,

I want to be the girl with the camera.

 

always and everywhere and naturally.

Jassi and me took pictures of all the people from our grade.

 

there’s a great amount of awesomeness in this photo.

have a look at the pictures I posted in the first comment. :)

 

[march 22 – 28, 2010]

 

Antique sepia-toned photograph of a Hungarian school class from 1924, featuring children and a teacher in period attire.

My sister's high school portrait. Photo was taken in 1985.

Near my house there's a bridge and driving under it everyday I always wanted to stop my car and take a few photos. Only thing, going there alone is kind of creepy since there's a lot of people's cars parked, amoung other things that go down under the bridge. So for class I had to take some landscape and cityscape pictures for an assignment, just bring a friend and shoot around town.. Even tho landscape isn't what I do best, this was actually kind of relaxing and fun to explore where I live.

Black and white class photo of young schoolgirls and their teacher in Hungary, taken in 1937, with a sign displaying "IV A".

You know the problem right?Classphotos in school and there is always one clown making funny things behind somebody´s back right?

Seems animals share human humor and do quiet the same.

 

BTW i didnt do anything to the sheep, it came right out of my cam this way. I still have no idea how this animal did that???

Maybe its no kissinggesture but she is laughing at my dog getting electrified by the wire around the sheeps paddock? I have never seen her jump THAT high and run that fast:o)))

No worries she just got spooked by the electric shock!

I think this was taken in the fall of 1954, at the beginning of my 5th grade school year in Riverside, CA.

 

I'm the one standing just to the left of our teacher, whose name I have sadly forgotten.

 

If I look a little short and scrawny in this photo, I have an excuse: I had skipped first grade a few years earlier, so I was a year younger than all the other kids in my class. And this was a year when both girls and boys began growing by leaps and bounds.

 

********************************

 

Most of the photos in this album were taken nearly 40 years after we first moved to Riverside, CA, as part of some research that I was doing for a novel called Do-Overs, the beginning of which can be found here on my website

 

www.yourdon.com/personal/fiction/doovers/index.html

 

and the relevant chapter (concerning Riverside) can be found here:

 

www.yourdon.com/personal/fiction/doovers/chapters/ch8.html

 

Before I get into the details, let me make a strong request — if you’re looking at these photos, and if you are getting any enjoyment at all of this brief look at some mundane Americana from 60+ years ago: find a similar episode in your own life, and write it down. Gather the pictures, clean them up, and upload them somewhere on the Internet where they can be found. Trust me: there will come a day when the only person on the planet who actually experienced those events is you. Your own memories may be fuzzy and incomplete; but they will be invaluable to your friends and family members, and to many generations of your descendants.

 

So, what do I remember about the year that I spent in Riverside? Not much at the moment, though I’m sure more details will occur to me in the days to come — and I’ll add them to these notes, along with additional photos that I’m tweaking and editing now (including some of the drive from Riverside to Omaha, where our family moved next), as well as some “real” contemporaneous photos I’ve found in family scrapbooks.

 

For now, here is a random list of things I remember:

 

1. I attended one school, somewhere in downtown Riverside, when my parents were looking for a house; and when they finally found a house out at the edge of town (at the base of the San Bernardino foothills), I was switched to a different school. This was typical; I usually attended two different schools in every city we lived in, and I attended a total of 17 schools before heading off to college.

 

2. While I eventually rode my bike to and from the second house to my school, I started off riding a school bus. A bunch of us kids would wait on a corner for the bus to arrive; and it was at the edge of a huge orange grove that seemed to stretch on forever. There were always a few rotten oranges lying on the ground, thoroughly rotten, and these substituted nicely for snowballs. There is nothing like the experience of being smacked in the stomach, of your fresh clean shirt, with a rotten orange.

 

3. Like most other suburban kids in the 1950s, I was allowed to do all sorts of things alone — as long as I returned home by dinner time. I could ride my bike anywhere I wanted, alone; I could hike way up into the hills alone (as long as I had a pocket-knife, which my father insisted I carry in case I was bitten by a rattlesnake). And I was allowed to sleep outside in the back yard, in a sleeping bag, virtually whenever I wanted to. The weather was always quite mild, the skies were clear (Los Angeles smog had not reached us in those days), and the stars were utterly amazing. There were shooting stars to watch, an experience I have never forgotten.

 

4. I discovered that marbles were excellent projectiles to shoot with one’s slingshot, and that they would actually travel in a more-or-less straight line. I became pretty good at shooting lizards with my slingshot; all I needed was an endless supply of marbles (because you could only shoot them once, at which point they would generally disappear somewhere). So I began practicing quite hard, played competitive games of marbles every day at school, and eventually amassed great quantities of the little round things.

 

5. Even better than lizards were spiders; they were everywhere, and they were relatively easy to catch. I don’t think any of them were dangerous, and in any case, none of them bit me. I sometimes put them in my pants pocket for the day, and I often brought them home. And I would put them in the dresser drawer with my socks and underwear; it seemed like a good place for them to relax. My mother discovered a couple of them one day, and was not impressed.

 

6. We had relatives in the city of Los Angeles, and made the 50-mile drive to visit them once or twice a year. We also made a 50-mile drive once or twice to visit San Juan Capistrano, which my parents thought was the most wonderful place in the world — mostly, they told me, because of the famous swallows that migrate each year from someplace in Argentina. In fact, I think they were impressed because they were old enough to like a 1940 hit song, “When the Swallows Come Back to Capistrano,” which I couldn’t stand. If they had told me the place was the locale of the first Zorro novella (“The Curse of Capistrano,” published in 1919), I would have been much more impressed.

 

7. Riverside is where I got my first dog—a mutt named Blackie, that was part of a litter produced by the next-door neighbor’s dog. It provided an open invitation for me to visit the next-door neighbors whenever I wanted, and swim in their pool (a rarity in those days). At the end of our year in Riverside, Blackie moved with us to our next location — traveling all the way in a little house/bed that had been made for him in the World War II Jeep that Dad hitched to his Chevrolet.

 

8. Riverside is also where I had my first exposure, at school, to kids of other ethnic backgrounds. There were Asian kids, and black kids, and Latino kids (whom, sadly, my father referred to generically as “Mexicans,” but whom he also held in high respect because he remembered watching their comrades working harder and longer than any of the “white boys” in the rough mining and ranching camps on the Utah/Colorado border, where he had grown up). All of us were thrown together in the same classroom, all of us traveled to each other’s houses and neighborhoods after school, and nobody seemed to think it was unusual in any way.

 

9. I learned, to my enormous delight, that I *was* different in one special way: I was left-handed. During the pickup baseball games that we played constantly during recess, lunch, and after school, there were never enough baseball gloves for everyone, so everyone simply shared with everyone else (after all, if your team is at bat, you don’t need your baseball glove). But I was the only left-handed kid around, apparently the only one in the whole school; so nobody ever wanted to share my glove.

  

for the Old School project at Uppercase Gallery.

Here's a photo of my final semester class at West Athens Elementary School in Los Angeles before moving to Orange County that Summer. Oddly, this was the only time I recall that class photos were taken at this school. This was the only elementary school that I had attended, from Kindergarten through 5th Grade, until moving.

 

I’ve placed some notes on the image regarding some of my classmates. There are some I had as classmates for several years.

 

Los Angeles City Schools utilized a 'split-session' system in which the Grade levels were divided into semesters which were denoted as 'A' and 'B' sessions. For example the first semester of First Grade for a given student was called 'B1'. The following semester for the same student would be 'A1.' A student might begin a grade level either in January or September. At any given time there were both 'B' and 'A' semesters being taught for any given grade.

 

Though it indicates “Grade 5 - 6”, this was my A5 class, i.e. the second semester of 5th Grade. There were no 6th Graders in this class. My sister at the time was in level B8, the first half of 8th Grade. That was at Henry Clay Junior High, also in Los Angeles.

 

Because we moved to Orange County during the Summer of 1966 right after I completed 5th Grade, I was naturally enrolled in the 6th Grade come September. But because there was no split-session schedule where we moved, there was no second half of 8th Grade into which my sister could be enrolled. Thus, she advanced half of a semester ahead into 9th Grade at Oxford Jr. High in Cypress.

This is definitely one of my favorite class photos. It's so clear and there are so many different expressions on the kids. Also, lots of pretty print dresses on the girls. Overalls are popular with the boys. Somebody has written the names of everybody on the back. Some of the last names are more difficult to decipher, so I'll just use first names.

The teacher, who looks so kind, is Miss Eggiman.

Front row: Bonnie, Joanna, Lloyd, Marlyn, George, Roberta, Barbara, Marianna.

Middle row: Ronald, Melvin, Ruth, Clara, Betty Jean, Betty May, Eleanor, Virginia.

Back row: Jack, Ella Belle, Willa, Genevieve, Merlin, Robert, Herbert, Richard.

Found this yesterday, this is one of my favorite class photos. I think it is because a good number of the boys are wearing western shirts, and that little kid back by the teacher who looks like he is real nervous.

 

Large and in charge!

From an album with almost no information. The only three dates in the whole album are 1908, 1914 and 1920. From two cities mentioned, they're in California.

Sepia-toned class photograph of schoolchildren and their teacher taken in Kassa, Hungary, 1913.

#21280

wasn't possible to make a serious classphoto with these little kids, they just wanted to make some fun

 

No information except a few of their names on the back. I don't see numbers written on the front for 5, 6, & 7. For reference, #7 was born in 1897.

1. Miss Main (my teacher)

2. Faith Calhoun

3. Hazel Olsen

4. Tom Ripptoe

5. John Dewall

6. Alana Best

7. Athelda Anthony

 

on the FAMILY side:

back row: Nine, Rose & MetaTen, Jenny

middle row: RiverSong, Eleven (with Handles), WarDoctor

front row: Four, Ten, Twelve.

 

the Moment is in the center because the Time War was in the center.

 

on the FRIENDS side:

back row: Brannigan, NoviceHame, CaptainJack, Ace!

middle row: Ood, Rory, AmyPond, Liz10

front row: Donna, Mickey & Martha, Osgood, Clara.

3650 W School St, Chicago. Neighborhood, Avondale. My Dad is on the top row 3rd from left.

Historic black and white class photo from 1908 of students and teachers at the Bólyai Főreáliskola in Budapest, Hungary.

Me crashing class photo at a temple in Japan - 1995?

Rue school is in Council Bluffs, Iowa. If any of the children are still living, they would be about 85 years old. Here's a link to an old photo of the school, built in 1924. www.pinterest.com/pin/19914423328339349/

Historical class portrait of students and teachers at Patrona Hungariae Girls' School, Budapest, Hungary, 1956.

1912 graduating class, University of Illinois College of Medicine

 

University of Illinois College of Physicians and Surgeons Class 1912

 

[My relative, Frank Breckinridge Earle MD, is listed below as faculty and secretary.]

[My relative Edwin Graffam Earle is also listed.]

 

Photograph credited to Morrison, Champlain Bldg. Chicago

 

as pictured, left to right, top to bottom

* indicates photographed graduate not listed in Class of 1912 in 1921 alumni record

† indicates faculty/staff

 

Jeremiah Frank Armstrong BS

Samuel John Ross BA BD

Frederick King Rogers

Julius Bloom

Frank Charles Winters

Marie Jeanette Jones

Charles Harcourt Johnson

Albert Allen

Oliver Edmond Van Alyea

Louis Franklin Kubela

Katharine Gerow

I. Smedley AB MD * (there is an Irene Smedley listed in the class of 1901)

Sarah Marguerite White

Abraham George Fleischman

Albert Eugene Fuchs

William Nuchine Goone

Louis Morris Greenberg

Nicholas Jaime

Warren Overton Wheelock

Vilda Samuel Laurin

Walker Roscoe Marks

 

Neal Lawrence O’Herrin

Leonard Joseph Ostrowski PhG

Herman Louis Sarvela

Howard Norton Flexer

Harry Wallace Hartzell

Asher Raymond Cottrell

Laura Murphy Cottrell

Leslie Lewis Stone PhG

Charles John Stauffacher BS

Carl Michel

Ruth Azniv Parmelee BA

Martin Pavel Sasko

Rocco V. Lobraico

Aron M. Beilin

Welcome Babcock Lewis BS

Otto Ishmael Green BS

Oliver Rufus Spalding

Arthur William Karch

William Christopher Schiele

Frederick Christopher Miller

John H. Hrabik

 

Clyde Earl Wilson

Harold H. Moore

Arthur Narcisse Chatel

Frank Dicosola

Merrill Worth Grubb

John Clement Williamson

Fred Eicher Stokey

Harold Vogt Gould

 

Edmond William Littlefield

Harry Joseph Dwyer

Robert Hurka

James Royal Smith

 

Ezra Lloyd Wurtzer

Roy F. Breeden

Richard Hunt Brown MD †

John Erasmus Harper AM MD †

Elmer DeWitt Brothers BS LLB †

Edward Louis Heintz PhG MD †

John Brown Loring MRCS CM MD †

William Henry Browne, Supt. †

Frank Eldridge Wynekoop MS MD †

Edmund Janes James PhD LLD, Pres. †

Francis Roberta Sherwood MD †

Harry Oscar White MD †

John Ross Harger BS MD †

William Albert Fisher MD †

Arthur Mills Corwin AM MD †

Maurice Louis Goodkind MD †

Joseph C. Beck MD †

Arthur Lewis Beyerlein

Roy Hitchon Wilson

 

Joseph Ingram Mershon

Lynn Luzerne Lorenz

Frederick George Dyas MD †

John Weatherson CE MD †

Bertha Van Hoosen BA MD †

Rachelle S. Yarros MD †

Frank Donald Moore MD †

Albert John Ochsner BS FRMS MD †

William Edward Quine MD LLD, Dean †

Joseph McIntyre Patton MD †

Stella May Gardner MD †

Lois Lindsey Wynekoop MD †

G. Frank Lydston MD †

John Lincoln Porter MD †

William McIntyre Harsha AB MD †

Frederick James Port

Benjamin Ziegfried Channon

 

Roscoe Roby Fisk

Thomas Harold Reagan

Charles Davison MD †

Charles Edward Humiston MD †

Carl Beck MD †

Harris Ellett Santee MD †

Nelson Mortimer Percy MD †

Twing Brooks Wiggins MD †

William Allen Pusey AM MD, V, Dean †

Charles Spencer Williamson BS MD †

Frank Breckinridge Earle MD, Secy. †

Lee Harrison Mettler AM MD †

Charles Sumner Bacon AM PhB MD †

Warren Coleman Hawthorne BA MS †

George Peter Dreyer AB PhD †

Emory Roe Hayhurst AM MD †

Channing Whitney Barrett MD †

George Abbott Chickering BS

Thomas Burke Walsh

 

David Deronda Delzell

Harry Knott

Henry Virgil Hanson

Frederick Gillette Harris MD †

William Elliott Gamble BS MD †

Charles Clayton O’Byrne MD †

Edwin Graffam Earle MD †

Frederick Tice MD †

Oscar A. King MD †

Alexander Hugh Ferguson MD CM RTMS MD †

Daniel Atkinson King Steele MD, Actuary †

Henry Turman Byford AM MD †

Adolph Gehrmann MD †

Bernard Fantus MD †

William Lincoln Ballenger MD †

Thomas Archibald Davis MD †

Harrison Willis Maltby DO

Theodore Kolvoord

Eseck Albert Aisenstadt

 

James Matthew Conerty

Clarence Henry Wieneke

Frank Monroe Weldy

Lyndon Denny Harris

Richard Root Rupert

John Adam Ebert

Bernard Barney Parker

Arthur Calvin Rhine

 

John Franklin Martin

Ralph Dollahan Murphy

Paul Vincent Joyce

Budd Robbins

Oliver S. Olson

Mabel Rosina Carlson, Ex. Com.

Stephen Alphonsus Donahoe, Ex. Com.

Robert Benoni Fleeger, Ex. Com.

Clyde Rogers Van Gundy, Ex. Com.

Gilbert Martin Loewe, Ex. Com.

John Simpson Gordon, Ex. Com.

Edward Albert Christofferson, Ch. Ex. Com.

Hobart Conway Ruddick, Ex. Com.

Frank Emerson Inks AB, Ex. Com.

Arthur William Wermuth, Ex. Com.

Benjamin George Stephenson, Ex. Com.

Clara Edna Hayes, Ex. Com.

Willard Robert Vaughan

James Bernard Raub PhB

Louis Robert Kratze (formerly Louis Robert Kratzenstein)

Frank Edmund Shipman PhG

Ruby Helen Paine

 

Alvin Thompson

Harry Joseph Fremmel

Chester Orville Shepard, Chap.

Naum George Nasie-Fattooh, Ast. Sgt. at Arms

John Gabriel O’Malley, Proph.

John Harrison Lynn, Hist.

Abraham Albert Freedman, Artist

Ray Evan Logan, Sal.

William Emmett Donahoe, 3rd V. Pres.

Eugene Radford Boyer, 1st V. Pres.

Alexander Donald Ferguson, President

Walter Knute Olson, 2nd V. Pres.

Selma Olga Czolbe, Secy.

Clarence James McMullen, Val.

Charles John Wagner MA, Treas.

Walter Raymond Jones BA, Poet

Harry Watson Martin, Editor

Arthur Emil August Wanderer, Associate Ed.

Alan Edward Gage, Sgt. at Arms

Grace Line Homman

Barbara Marie Nickey

 

C. Edward John Miller

James Francis Peattie

Emil James Stein

Isidore Emil Kohn

Paul Morton Miller

Harry Aldes

Clement Fischer

Sigurd Herbert Kraft

Ross Oren Taylor

Delta Eulilla Rowland

Charles Patton Blair MA

Mabel India Adams

Fred Raymond Crooks

Luther Remi Moore

Jack Ralph Lavieri

John Aldren Dean Engesather

Samuel Stusser

Edwin Rutherford Butterfield

Charles Chester Dickinson

Torrance Reed

Walter William Cress

Benson Mundy Jewell

 

University of Illinois College of Medicine Graduating Class Composite Photos. Special Collections and University Archives, University of Illinois at Chicago Library

 

This image may be used freely, with attribution, for research, study and educational purposes. For permission to publish, distribute, or use this image for any other purpose, please contact Special Collections and University Archives, University of Illinois at Chicago Library at digitizeuic@yahoo.com

 

Cite as 1912 graduating class, University of Illinois College of Medicine; University of Illinois College of Medicine Graduating Class Composite Photos; University of Illinois at Chicago Library

 

For more images from the collection, visit collections.carli.illinois.edu/cdm4/browse.php?CISOROOT=/...

  

1895 graduating class, University of Illinois College of Medicine

 

[My relative, Frank Breckinridge Earle, MD, faculty, is listed below.]

 

as pictured, left to right, top to bottom (in best approximation of horizontal rows)

* indicates photographed graduate not listed in 1921 alumni record

† indicates faculty/staff

 

Max Staller

Bernard E. McShane

Thomas Stephen Green

William Koenig Spiece

Richard Joseph Nagle

William James Cochrane

J. Henry Leonard

Jesse McClain

Joseph Carl Beck

Jesse A. Slocumb

 

Frederic Ferdinand Seville

Francis S. Diller

Walter D. Leach

Ernest August Matthaei

John G. Franken

 

Henry Ernest Wagner

Charles Hamilton

Benjamin Feltenstein

George W. Johnson

John Mills Mayhew

Dwight Courtland Phillips

Albert A. Lowenthal

Howard Hamilton

Frank Eldridge Wynekoop

Arthur A. Gaebler

 

George N. Lucas

Frank J. Hellebrandt

Irvin J. Heckman

Adolph Gehrmann †

William Thomas Eckley †

John Henry Curtis †

Thomas Archibald Davis †

John A. Benson †

Louis Dysart

George Washington Davies

Wilder DeWolfe Hubbard

 

Daniel J. Carey

Charles William Dulin

Robert Erben Steele

William Edward Coates

 

Maurice Forestus Doty

John V. Lewis

W. Augustus Evans †

Walter M. Tanquary †

Henry Parker Newman †

Daniel A. K. Steele †

John B. Murphy †

William Allen Pusey †

Henry Leland Tolman †

Lee Weber

Sherman Harrison Champlin

 

Austin E. Miller

N. A. Johnnow *

J. A. Wesener †

George Frank Lydston †

Bayard Taylor Holmes †

William Edward Quine †

Oscar Augustus King †

Frank Breckenridge Earle †

Francis Roberta Sherwood †

August F. Lemke

Charles B. Smith

 

George E. Vaughan

Frank Louis Mueller

George F. Butler †

Thomas Melville Hardie †

Albert Edward Hoadley †

Boerne Bettman †

Henry T. Byford †

Moreau Roberts Brown †

Ira D. Isham †

Henry L. Wilson

William Lawson Webster

 

Oscar T. Peterson

Edwin Mortimer Tillson

John A. Gillespie

James Madison Gore Carter †

Walter Shields Christopher †

Robert Hall Babcock †

Weller VanHook †

Ludwig Hektoen †

Fred W. Grayston

Albert William Bradford

Cornelius L. Lenard

 

Theodore Bernard Sachs

Frank O. Higbee

Harry S. Scott

J. C. Springer* (Joseph C. Springer listed in Class of 1896)

George D. B. Dods

Elizabeth M. Heelan †

Eugene F. Talbott

Albert E. Swartz

Abram S. Pease

Bo Carr Bowell

Earl Rice

 

John Pattison Riggs

Chauncy H. Wilder

Joseph Louis Veit (?)

Owen Marion Slater

Christian H. Le Duc (?)

Joseph Carl Belitz (?)

James Elbert Shepstone (?)

Sidney Beall Clark (?)

Franklin A. Weatherford (?)

Herman Leo Nahin (formerly Herman Leo Nahinsky)

Harry Holroyd Ainsworth

 

Louis Frederic May (?)

Wladimir J. Sieminowicz (?)

George S. Henderson

Victor J. Meltzer

Darwin Richard Stockley (?)

William Jones

 

Not pictured:

Adolpho Alphonso Luria (A. Lauria pictured in 1894 composite)

Joseph J. Tremblay (J. J. Tremblay pictured in 1894 composite)

 

University of Illinois College of Medicine Graduating Class Composite Photos. Special Collections and University Archives, University of Illinois at Chicago Library

 

This image may be used freely, with attribution, for research, study and educational purposes. For permission to publish, distribute, or use this image for any other purpose, please contact Special Collections and University Archives, University of Illinois at Chicago Library at digitizeuic@yahoo.com

 

Cite as 1895 graduating class, University of Illinois College of Medicine; University of Illinois College of Medicine Graduating Class Composite Photos; University of Illinois at Chicago Library

 

For more images from the collection, visit collections.carli.illinois.edu/cdm4/index_uic_cmc.php?CIS...

 

PRODigital Collections, UIC Library:

1896 graduating class, University of Illinois College of Medicine

 

Photograph credited to Place & Coover Photographers

 

[My relatives, Frank Breckinridge Earle and Edwin Graffam Earle (first cousins), are listed below as Faculty/Staff. Edwin is listed in The Earle Family: Ralph Earle and His Descendants Compiled By Pliny Earle of Northampton, Massachusetts. Printed For The Family. Worcester, Mass.: Press Of Charles Hamilton, 1888, p.317, as a child of:

John H. Earle [1560, bro of 1557 Moses L.

2878-4. Edwin G[raffam] Earle, b. March 29, 1866; lives in Sidney, Australia.

[cousin of 2862 & 2865 Charles Warrington Earle & Frank Breckinridge Earle] He is only 30 years old in this photo.]

 

* indicates photographed graduate not listed in 1921 alumni record

† indicates faculty/staff

 

diagonal, top left to bottom right

Moreau Roberts Brown †

Thomas Archibald Davis †

W. Augustus Evans †

Adolph Gehrmann †

Alison W. Harlan †

William Thomas Eckley †

Boerne Bettman †

John B. Murphy †

William Edward Quine †

John Henry Curtis †

Frank Breckenridge Earle †

George F. Butler †

Henry T. Byford †

John A. Benson †

George Washington Post Sr. †

Carl Beck †

Francis Roberta Sherwood †

 

diagonal, bottom left to top right, not including center

William Allen Pusey †

John T. Milnamow †

Thomas A. Broadbent †

Edwin Graffam Earle †

Thomas Melville Hardie †

Walter Shields Christopher †

George Frank Lydston †

Bayard Taylor Holmes †

A. W. Newman †

Robert Hall Babcock †

James Madison Gore Carter †

J. A. Wesener †

Henry Leland Tolman †

Ira D. Isham †

James Nelson Bartholomew †

Edward C. Seufert †

 

top quadrant

Elizabeth M. Heelan †

Frank Walker Burns

Isaiah B. Seagley

Henry A. Mount

Thomas Clay Hollister

Frank M. Wilmer

Charles E. Humiston

George Gill

George Sigel Eddy

Wallace H. Vosburgh

Frank Mason

Muret Napoleon Leland

Charles M. Headrick

John Rogers Hudson

Oscar Augustus King †

 

left quadrant

Leslie W. Schwab

Grant Mitchell

James M. Moses

J. H. Shinnick

Samuel Joseph Dobson

Richard Henry Sweetman

J. A. Asher *

Asahel E. Briggs

Joseph Hugh McGready

Joel Harvey Waldron

Charles Allen Yates

Charles L. Hammond

Albert A. Starner

 

right quadrant

August Doerr

Thomas J. O’Malley

Wilbur Washington McKenzie

Torstein Andreas Lid

Walter T. Swink

Frank E. Culp

Roy Richards Eaton

I. R. Sapley *

Cleaves Bennett

William J. Laird

Albert H. Linaweaver

Fred Lee Glenn

H. A. Jegi

 

bottom quadrant

Albert Edward Hoadley †

Daniel A. K. Steele †

Adolph Bonner

Ralph S. Grace

Park B. Jenkins

Hubert O. Sumpmann

George S. Edmonson

William Rockwell Cheever

K. O. Austin

Irving J. Straus

Timothy Hartigan

George Herbert Lawrence

James P. Widmeyer

August De Fries

Emil George Beck

 

Not pictured:

Ole H. Berg

Norman Arthur Johnstone

Percival Pearce (pictured in Class of 1889)

Joseph C. Springer (J. C. Springer pictured in 1895 composite)

Fred Carl Zapffe

 

University of Illinois College of Medicine Graduating Class Composite Photos. Special Collections and University Archives, University of Illinois at Chicago Library

 

This image may be used freely, with attribution, for research, study and educational purposes. For permission to publish, distribute, or use this image for any other purpose, please contact Special Collections and University Archives, University of Illinois at Chicago Library at digitizeuic@yahoo.com

 

Cite as 1896 graduating class, University of Illinois College of Medicine; University of Illinois College of Medicine Graduating Class Composite Photos; University of Illinois at Chicago Library

 

For more images from the collection, visit collections.carli.illinois.edu/cdm4/index_uic_cmc.php?CIS...

My grandmother, Astrid Linnea Pettersson (later Johansson) is seated bottom center. So many haunting things about this photograph. Not sure why the teacher is facing left.

funnest ever commission for a friend!

Most wear the school tie, for the boys white or grey school shirts keep the photo neat.

Wearing green breeches tucked into your wellingtons proves you can liven up the uniform a little in a colour photograph, if it had been in B&W they would have not been noticed.

The teacher could have hid him on the back row, but lets have some fun this year.

Cumbernauld, Scotland

Holy Rosary Separate School Grade V - Epson V500 Photo Scan - Photographer Russell McNeil PhD (Physics) lives in Nanaimo, British Columbia where he works also as a writer and a personal trainer.

[My relative, Charles Warrington Earle, is listed with the faculty, (No. 5) below.]

 

1888 graduating class, [became the] University of Illinois College of Medicine ...

 

Photograph credited to Chicago Fowler Photographer

 

Listed as numbered at bottom of composite

* indicates photographed graduate not listed in Class of 1888 in 1921 alumni record

 

FACULTY

1.Abraham Reeves Jackson

2.Samuel Anderson McWilliams

3.Daniel A. K. Steele

4.Leonard St. John

5. Charles Warrington Earle

6.Henry Palmer

7.Frank E. Waxham

8.John Erasmus Harper

9.Alison W. Harlan

10.Albert Edward Hoadley

11.C. C. P. Silva

12.Oscar Augustus King

13.Romaine J. Curtiss

14.Wallace Kasson Harrison

15.William Edward Quine

16.James Thomas Jelks

17.Frank Oakley Stockton

18.Henry J. Reynolds

19.S. K. Crawford

20.Nicholas Senn

21.Christian Fenger

22.Charles Brockway Gibson

23.John A. Benson

24.Randolph N. Hall

25.Rev. Thos. E. Green, Chaplain

 

GRADUATING CLASS

26.William Orr AndersonMillbrook, Pa.

27.Franklin M. BaileyWaynesburgh, Ohio

28.Herman R. Bulson MDEureka, Cal.

29.Henry Leslie BurrellMattawan, Mich

30.John A. L. BradfieldEureka, Ill.

31.George C. BrengleWinchester, Ill.

32.S. W. BursonChicago, Ill.

33.Isaac Monroe BrownNorthport, Wis.

34.Arthur W. BurrowsWinchester, Ill

35.Neil CameronGlamis, Ont.

36.Milton F. CoeWheaton, Ill.

37.Frank C. CullenAmboy, Ill

38.William Wilson CokerLondon, England

39.John Howard DavisColumbus, Wis.

40.Frank E. DuckworthChariton, Iowa

41.Clifford P. FallAurora, Neb.

42.William Steve FowlerChicago, Ill.

43.David William Feltenstein MDSt. Joseph, Mo.

44.John Ferguson GloverEvansville, Ind.

45.Thomas J. HainesVandalia, Mich.

46.Bartlett Yancey HarrisEureka, Cal.

47.Henry A. HollidayHayton, Wis.

48.David Peck HuestonKeokuk, Iowa

49.David Thomas JonesChilton, Wis.

50.William Francis MaloneRochester, Wis.

51.Fitch C. E. MattisonChicago, Ill.

52.E. Martin *Chicago, Ill (Eugene Martin pictured in Class of 1889)

53.R. J. McLemore *Mason City, Ill.

54.Robert R. MichaelTuckerville, Neb.

55.Ernest J. MillerWauseon, Ohio

56.Frank L. MyersAurelia, Iowa

57.George Myron NesbitWaterloo, Iowa

58.Henry Frederick PetersenElgin, Ill.

59.Oscar F. PileMemphis, Mo.

60.Charles SterlingNottingham, England

61.Walter B. StewartWilmington, Ill.

62.Otto William StaibBerlin, Germany

63.Schuyler F. ShidlerLakeville, Ind.

64.James T. StantonChicago, Ill.

65.E. Shellito *Marcellus, Mich (Ernest Shellito listed in Class of 1890)

66.Joseph J. SelbachGreen Bay, Wis.

67.James G. SinclairChicago, Ill.

68.Bruno Von SchallernManitowo, Wis.

69.William Bentley TowleMelbourne, Australia

70.Howard Eugene WhiteMilwaukee, Wis.

71.John James WoodChicago, Ill.

72.Daniel Baldwin WylieWausau, Wis.

 

Not pictured:

Levi B. Casey

Luther R. Williamson

 

University of Illinois College of Medicine Graduating Class Composite Photos. Special Collections and University Archives, University of Illinois at Chicago Library

 

This image may be used freely, with attribution, for research, study and educational purposes. For permission to publish, distribute, or use this image for any other purpose, please contact Special Collections and University Archives, University of Illinois at Chicago Library at digitizeuic@yahoo.com

 

Cite as 1888 graduating class, University of Illinois College of Medicine; University of Illinois College of Medicine Graduating Class Composite Photos; University of Illinois at Chicago Library

 

For more images from the collection, visit collections.carli.illinois.edu/cdm4/index_uic_cmc.php?CIS...

 

"Ia Klasse

1912"

 

Man beachte deren Blicke

Courtney McCool on floor exercise at the 2004 USA Gymnastics Olympic trials on June 25, 2004 at Arrowhead pond in Anaheim, California. Gatson was selected for the Olympic team after his performance at the Trials. McCool has conditionally qualified for the

This is me in fifth class see if you can spot me. Note it was a joined class of years 5/6

1 3 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80