Collection of spirit stereographs 1893-1894
Related Entities
There are 4 Entities related to this resource.
Keystone view company
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w62c9qw0 (corporateBody)
Boxed set of 75 stereoscopic views, World War I scenes with lengthy captions, part of the Stereographic Library issued by the Keystone View Co., ca. 1914-1918. Includes images of battlefields and trenches, armaments, cavalry, buildings, hospitals and cemeteries, dirigible, German prisoners, and Treaty of Versailles. Mainly images from France, but also Belgium, Germany, Turkey (Gallopoli), London, training in the U.S., ships at sea, and one view of submarines, battleships, and torpedo boats in Sa...
Underwood & Underwood
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6nq2wgr (corporateBody)
In 1882 Elmer and Ben Underwood set up an office on Ottawa, Kansas to distribute Eastern photographers' stereographs to the Western market with door-to-door salesmen. By 1891, they had established a plant in Ottawa to manufature stereo photographic cameras, stereo views and stereoscopes; moved their headquarters to New York City, opened branch offices in Baltimore, New York, and Liverpool. By 1901, Underwood and Underwood was manufacturing packaged sets of stereo views--25,000 a day...
Singley, B. L. (Benjamin Lloyd)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6f51p1p (person)
"The Keystone View Company of Meadville, Pa., was the world's largest producer of stereographs and was in business from 1892 to 1970 on a limited basis. The company was founded by Benneville Lloyd Singley (1864-1938) who photographed many of the views sold by Keystone." -- "The 3-D Exhibit." Donald C. and Elizabeth M. Dickinson Research Center. http://www.nationalcowboymuseum.org/research/r_virt_mm5.html (Retrieved July 16, 2009) "The Chickamauga Battlefield, established...
Littleton View Co.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61097qv (corporateBody)