LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS: Difference between revisions
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<TITLE>Burton J. Hendrick. The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page. 1922. Illustrations.</TITLE> | <TITLE>Burton J. Hendrick. The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page. 1922. Illustrations.</TITLE> | ||
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<TD WIDTH="95%"><FONT SIZE="+1" FACE="Times">A silver model of | <TD WIDTH="95%"><FONT SIZE="+1" FACE="Times">A silver model of | ||
the <I>Mayflower, </I>the farewell gift of the Plymouth Council | the <I>Mayflower, </I>the farewell gift of the Plymouth Council | ||
to Mr. Page</FONT></TD | to Mr. Page</FONT></TD> | ||
Revision as of 23:47, 29 January 2009
<TITLE>Burton J. Hendrick. The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page. 1922. Illustrations.</TITLE>
</HEAD> <BODY BGCOLOR="#ffffff">
<IMG SRC="images/sig.gif" WIDTH="288" HEIGHT="126" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="0" >
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
<A HREF="images/Page01.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page01tn.jpg" WIDTH="113" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Walter H. Page |
<A HREF="images/Page02.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page02tn.jpg" WIDTH="113" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Allison Francis
Page (1824-1899),father of Walter H. Page |
<A HREF="images/Page03.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page03tn.jpg" WIDTH="111" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Catherine Raboteau
Page (1831-1897),mother of Walter H. Page |
<A HREF="images/Page04.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page04tn.jpg" WIDTH="72" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Walter H. Page in
1876, when he was a Fellow of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore,Md. |
<A HREF="images/Page05.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page05tn.jpg" WIDTH="103" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Basil L. Gildersleeve,
Professor of Greek,Johns Hopkins University, 1876-1915 |
<A HREF="images/Page06.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page06tn.jpg" WIDTH="102" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Walter H. Page (1899)
from a photograph taken when he was editor of the AtlanticMonthly |
<A HREF="images/Page07.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page07tn.jpg" WIDTH="113" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Dr. Wallace Buttrick,
|
<A HREF="images/Page08.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page08tn.jpg" WIDTH="99" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Charles D. McIver,
of Greensboro, North Carolina, a leader in the cause of SouthernEducation |
<A HREF="images/Page09.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page09tn.jpg" WIDTH="113" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Woodrow Wilson in 1912 |
<A HREF="images/Page10.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page10tn.jpg" WIDTH="105" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Walter H. Page,
from a photograph taken a few years before he became AmericanAmbassador to Great Britain |
<A HREF="images/Page11.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page11tn.jpg" WIDTH="120" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
The British Foreign Office, Downing Street |
<A HREF="images/Page12.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page12tn.jpg" WIDTH="114" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
No. 6 Grosvenor
Square,the American Embassy under Mr. Page |
<A HREF="images/Page13.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page13tn.jpg" WIDTH="97" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Irwin Laughlin,
Secretary of the American Embassy at London, 1912-1917, Counsellor1916-1919 |
<A HREF="images/Page14.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page14tn.jpg" WIDTH="79" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Sir Edward Grey |
<A HREF="images/Page15.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page15tn.jpg" WIDTH="108" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Col. Edward M. House.
|
<A HREF="images/Page16.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page16tn.jpg" WIDTH="93" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
The Rt. Hon. Herbert
Henry Asquith,Prime Minister of Great Britain, 1908-1916 |
<A HREF="images/Page17.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page17tn.jpg" WIDTH="100" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Herbert C. Hoover, in 1914 |
<A HREF="images/Page18.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page18tn.jpg" WIDTH="122" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
A facsimile page
from the Ambassador's letter of November 24, 1916, resigninghis Ambassadorship |
<A HREF="images/Page19.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page19tn.jpg" WIDTH="96" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Walter H. Page, at the time of America's entry into the war, April, 1917 |
<A HREF="images/Page20.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page20tn.jpg" WIDTH="112" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Resolution passed
by the two Houses of Parliament, April 18, 1917, on America'sentry into the war |
<A HREF="images/Page21.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page21tn.jpg" WIDTH="116" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
The Rt. Hon. David
Lloyd George,Prime Minister of Great Britain, 1916- |
<A HREF="images/Page22.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page22tn.jpg" WIDTH="108" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
The Rt. Hon. Arthur
James Balfour (now the Earl of Balfour), Secretary of State forForeign Affairs, 1916-1919 |
<A HREF="images/Page23.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page23tn.jpg" WIDTH="124" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Lord Robert Cecil,
Minister of Blockade, 1916-1918, Assistant Secretary of Statefor Foreign Affairs, 1918 |
<A HREF="images/Page24.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page24tn.jpg" WIDTH="101" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
General John J.
Pershing, Commander-in-Chief of the American Expeditionary Forcein the Great War |
<A HREF="images/Page25.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page25tn.jpg" WIDTH="88" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
Admiral William
Sowden Sims, Commander of American Naval Forces operating inEuropean waters during the Great War |
<A HREF="images/Page26.jpg"><IMG SRC="thumbnails/Page26tn.jpg" WIDTH="120" HEIGHT="144" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="1" ></A> |
A silver model of
the Mayflower, the farewell gift of the Plymouth Councilto Mr. Page |