Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Spanish-American war images

I was poking around some of the Library of Congress' online war images, and I came across these from the Spanish-American War, aka, la Guerra Hispano-estadounidense, fought in 1898. It left the United States in control of Puerto Rico and the Philippines, and Cuba independent. I recently posted a review of a book that discussed some of the background of that war.

Today we have war movies; in 1898 they had Barnum and Bailey shows

The United States fought on the same side of Cuban independence fighters, portrayed here awaiting a Spanish attack. The McKinley administration wasn't especially thrilled about the rowdies in the independence movement or their goals. But they coincided with American economic and geopolitical aspirations.

The war contributed a lot to Theodore Roosevelt's current fame and later legend

This shows the actual Rough Riders in Tampa, Florida.

Several of the items in the Library of Congress online collection were of this double-photo kind. Apparently this was meant to be folded so that each side would have the same photo but a different caption.

I couldn't get this one to show up as clearly as I would have liked. But it shows an American version of the "white man's burden" made famous by British colonialists. This shows an American burdened down with several black children and lots of tropical-looking stuff. The caption says, "The Philippines, Puerto Rico and Cuba - Uncle Sam's burden". I can't really tell if this was meant as some kind of joke, or if it was meant to be taken seriously, or if it's just some kind of racist caricature. Not that the three are necessarily mutually exclusive.

The above double-photo shows Spanish troops embarking in Santiago, Cuba.

This pair of duplicate photos shows the bombardment of Puerto Rico by the Americans.

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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

And I thought you knew everything. My bubble has burst.

StereoscopeSir Charles Wheatstone, 1838popularized by Oliver Wendell ToysHistory: Stereoscopes, also known as stereopticons or stereo viewers, were one of America's most popular forms of entertainment in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The first patented stereoscope was invented by Sir Charles Wheatstone in 1838. Wheatstone had experimented with simple stereoscopic drawings in 1832, several years before photography was invented. Later, the two principles were combined to form the stereoscope. However, Wheatstone's stereoscope was not as popular as a later version, made by Oliver Wendell Holmes. One such stereoscope is displayed above. Called the Holmes Stereo Viewer, it was the most common type of stereoscope from 1881 until 1939. How it works: A stereoscope is composed of two pictures mounted next to each other, and a set of lenses to view the pictures through. Each picture is taken from a slightly different viewpoint that corresponds closely to the spacing of the eyes. The left picture represents what the left eye would see, and likewise for the right picture. When observing the pictures through a special viewer, the pair of two-dimensional pictures merge together into a single three-dimensional photograph.We can see a 3D picture through a stereoscope for the same reason a building appears three-dimensional. The right and left eyes see a slightly different version of the same scene, and taken together, we get an illusion of depth. This phenomenon had been known for quite some time, ever since the ancient Greek mathematician Euclid discovered the principles of binocular vision. Early stereo photographs were taken with a camera mounted on a tripod with a sliding bar. Once the first picture was taken and a new photographic plate was inserted, the camera was moved about 7 cm along the bar (approximately adult eye spacing). Then, the second picture was taken. top
What became of it:Stereoscopes continued to be widespread in America until the 1930s. Then stereoscope production declined, likely due to the new interest in motion pictures. However, the stereoscope continues to offer viewers something that no ordinary photograph or movie can offer, namely a sense of depth and image realism. A descendant of the stereoscope, the Viewmaster, is currently a popular children's toy.Sources: Interview with Mr. Phil Condax, August 7, 2000 5:30 pm Background information:http://www.bitwise.net/~ken-bill/stereo.htmTo see a modern stereoscope:http://www.3dviewmax.com/ top
Other stereoscopes in our collection:(click to view larger pictures) Conway Stereo Viewer 1920s-30s Stereo Viewer

Bruce Miller said...

Now that you mention it, I've looked through a few of those myself. I thought they looked kind of familiar!