Featured on PDR in the collection The “Living Photographs” of Mole and Thomas

In search of some eye-catching imagery to boost morale surrounding US involvement in WWI, the US military commissioned the English-born photographer Arthur Mole and his assistant John Thomas to make a series of extraordinary group portraits. Between 1915 and 1921, with the dutiful help of thousands of servicemen and staff from various US military camps, the duo produced around thirty of the highly patriotic images, which Mole labelled "living photographs".

Machine Gun Insignia; Machine Gun Training Center; 22500 officers and men, 600 machine guns; Camp Hancock, Augusta, Georgia.

Artist

Date

ca. 1918


Underlying Rights

Public Domain U.S.

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights

  • Source states “no known restrictions”
  • We offer this info as guidance only

Image Size

640 x 502 Higher res available?

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