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1896 - 1912
1896 - 1912
Robert was my great uncle, the youngest of seven children. One of his older brothers got him a job with the Southern Pacific Railroad when he was 16, in San Antonio, Texas.
On March 18, 1812 one month and twenty four days after he turned 17, he was killed when a locomotive blew up. Twenty five other people were killed and 32 seriously injured. In his 2006 book “Railroads of San Antonio,” Hemphill calls the incident “the worst locomotive boiler explosion in the nation's history.”
His remains were returned to his father in Louisiana and he was buried next to his mother in Pineville.
For school we have to portrait some people at home in their own environment so that's the start of this series
Being the second wife she didn't get respect from the society and all she got was hatred from her husband's family. She lived in different houses on rent and kept changing houses due to financial issues. Time passed and it became difficult for her husband to balance two families as he belonged to middle class background. There was a time when she was homeless, with her two kids. Her husband managed to buy a small house but there were still financial crisis. She decided she needed to work for herself and her children.
He was commissioned to do a portrait of B. Scull. He took her to a photo booth where you paid a quarter to take a photo, and proceeded to take a number of shots. To Scull’s surprise, this ended up being her portrait. It captures a range of expressions.
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