Glass plate negative made by Walter J. Hussey, 1885-1910. Washington DC as seen from the top of the Washington Monument.
A view from the observation deck at the top of the Washington Monument looking east down the north side of the future National Mall. The enormous Central Market on B Street, NW (renamed Constitution Avenue in 1931) covering two blocks between 7th and 9th Streets, NW and the large Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Station17 at 6th and B Streets, NW are visible in this image, as is the large white Patent Building (now the Donald W. Reynolds Center for American Art and Portraiture) and the Pension Building (now the National Building Museum). Taken in December 1889.
The collection in the Photographic History Collection consists of over two hundred glass plate negatives made by Walter J. Hussey (1865-1959). These glass plate negatives consist of daily life in and around Mount Pleasant, Ohio, Mr. Hussey's friends and family, studio portraits, his trips to the Washington, D.C. area, and Florida.
Glass plate negative made by Walter J. Hussey, 1885-1910. The United States Capitol building in the snow, east front, Washington DC.. Taken in December 1889.
The collection in the Photographic History Collection consists of over two hundred glass plate negatives made by Walter J. Hussey (1865-1959). These glass plate negatives consist of daily life in and around Mount Pleasant, Ohio, Mr. Hussey's friends and family, studio portraits, his trips to the Washington, D.C. area, and Florida.
The indications or uses for this product as provided by the manufacturer are: antacidFOR THE RELIEF OF UPSET STOMACH DUE TO GASTRIC HYPERACIDITy, FAST RELIEF for ACID INDIGESTION, SOUR STOMACH,
This electrotype of “Hu’petha” was prepared by the Government Printing Office in Washington, D.C.; the image was published as Plate 28 (p.163) in an article by Alice C. Fletcher (1838-1923) and Francis La Flesche (1857-1932) entitled “The Omaha Tribe” in the Twenty-Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian, 1905-1906.
This Empath audio mixer was made by the Rane Corporation, Mukilteo, Washington. It is a Grandmaster Flash Gold Signature edition, serial number (21) 00425549, 3-channel, 10” format mixer. A mixer, also called a sound board, mixing desk, or audio production console, is an electronic device for combining or “mixing” audio from multiples sources such as turntables or cd players and equalizing, cross-fading, adjusting timbre, and changing dynamics of audio signals to an external source such as speakers or a recording device.
Grandmaster Flash (Joseph Saddler), was born in Barbados in 1958. Growing up in the Bronx, he was influenced by his father’s massive record collection. As a teenager, Grandmaster Flash first experimented with DJ equipment and became involved in the New York DJ scene while attending daytime technical school courses in electronics. The innovations and techniques developed by Grandmaster Flash established him as one of the pioneers of hip hop and deejaying.