Stereograph

Name/Title

Stereograph

Entry/Object ID

2023.055.3.0166

Description

A black and white stereograph. Image is of a long line of German prisoners of war being marched, there are several buildings in the background. Above the image "W240 (Star)" is pritned, below the image "V18878 Bringing in 1900 German Prisoners Captured by American Forces, France." is printed, to the left of the image "Keystone View Company Copyrighted, Underwood & Underwood, Inc. Manufacturers MADE IN U.S.A. Publishers" is printed, to the right of the image "Meadville, Pa., New York, N. Y., Chicago, Ill., London, England." is printed. On the reverse the following is printed: V18878 A HAUL OF 1900 GERMAN PRISONERS, FRANCE A column of fours, as far as the eye can reach, nothing but Germans, muddy, sullen, and harmless, for they are prisoners, the result of a day's fighting. Some of them still wear their heavy steel trench helmets, others have the round gray caps with a red band, the headgear of the German private; while others are wearing visored hats; those men are non-comissioned officers. On many of the hats you can see the small bluted button, a part of the German army insignia, made of concentric circles, red, white and black. Many of them are wearing spectacles and practically all of them have a sack under the arm, filled with the few necessities that they considered worth keeping when they threw up their hands and cried "Kamrad." A good idea of the German uniforms can be obtained by looking at thse men who are wearing overcoats and then at those who are wearing the ordinary tunics. The feet of one of the men are visible, showing the clumsy field boots with which the soldiers of the Kaiser were equipped. Two of the men, those with the Red Cross arm band, were a part of a medical detachment. Far to the rear of the group you can see the stockade of wire and stakes erected to make the German think twice before attempting to pass the armed guards, who patrol the edge of the camp day and night. American troops during the war lost only 4,480 men taken prisoners by the enemy. On the ohter hand, they captured 63,000 German prisoners. 16,000 of them in the battle of St. Mihiel and 23,000 in the battle of the Meuse-Argonne. Copyright by The Keystone View Company

Collection

Photograph Collection