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"Orgelsdorfer Eulenspiegel" was a literary magazine written, illustrated, printed, and distributed by German and German-American prisoners interned at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, during and after World War I. Magazine content includes original and familiar poems, letters, stories, commentary, humor, announcements and reviews of camp events and performances, and colored woodcut illustrations depicting camp life and portraits of prisoners. Portrait subjects include Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Karl Muck, geneticist Richard Goldschmidt, writer Hanns Heinz Ewers, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conductor Ernst Kunwald, and physicist Jonathan Zenneck. Early issues reference the impact of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 (the "Spanish Flu") on the camp. English translations were created by Helen Groh and Daniela Gunthe. Groh and Gunth prioritized translating articles that described camp life. Some of the stories were not translated due to the difficulty of the older German language.
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"Orgelsdorfer Eulenspiegel" was a literary magazine written, illustrated, printed, and distributed by German and German-American prisoners interned at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, during and after World War I. Magazine content includes original and familiar poems, letters, stories, commentary, humor, announcements and reviews of camp events and performances, and colored woodcut illustrations depicting camp life and portraits of prisoners. Portrait subjects include Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Karl Muck, geneticist Richard Goldschmidt, writer Hanns Heinz Ewers, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conductor Ernst Kunwald, and physicist Jonathan Zenneck. Early issues reference the impact of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 (the "Spanish Flu") on the camp. English translations were created by Helen Groh and Daniela Gunthe. Groh and Gunth prioritized translating articles that described camp life. Some of the stories were not translated due to the difficulty of the older German language.
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"Orgelsdorfer Eulenspiegel" was a literary magazine written, illustrated, printed, and distributed by German and German-American prisoners interned at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, during and after World War I. Magazine content includes original and familiar poems, letters, stories, commentary, humor, announcements and reviews of camp events and performances, and colored woodcut illustrations depicting camp life and portraits of prisoners. Portrait subjects include Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Karl Muck, geneticist Richard Goldschmidt, writer Hanns Heinz Ewers, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conductor Ernst Kunwald, and physicist Jonathan Zenneck. Early issues reference the impact of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 (the "Spanish Flu") on the camp. English translations were created by Helen Groh and Daniela Gunthe. Groh and Gunth prioritized translating articles that described camp life. Some of the stories were not translated due to the difficulty of the older German language.
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"Orgelsdorfer Eulenspiegel" was a literary magazine written, illustrated, printed, and distributed by German and German-American prisoners interned at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, during and after World War I. Magazine content includes original and familiar poems, letters, stories, commentary, humor, announcements and reviews of camp events and performances, and colored woodcut illustrations depicting camp life and portraits of prisoners. Portrait subjects include Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Karl Muck, geneticist Richard Goldschmidt, writer Hanns Heinz Ewers, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conductor Ernst Kunwald, and physicist Jonathan Zenneck. Early issues reference the impact of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 (the "Spanish Flu") on the camp. English translations were created by Helen Groh and Daniela Gunthe. Groh and Gunth prioritized translating articles that described camp life. Some of the stories were not translated due to the difficulty of the older German language.
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"Orgelsdorfer Eulenspiegel" was a literary magazine written, illustrated, printed, and distributed by German and German-American prisoners interned at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, during and after World War I. Magazine content includes original and familiar poems, letters, stories, commentary, humor, announcements and reviews of camp events and performances, and colored woodcut illustrations depicting camp life and portraits of prisoners. Portrait subjects include Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Karl Muck, geneticist Richard Goldschmidt, writer Hanns Heinz Ewers, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conductor Ernst Kunwald, and physicist Jonathan Zenneck. Early issues reference the impact of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 (the "Spanish Flu") on the camp. English translations were created by Helen Groh and Daniela Gunthe. Groh and Gunth prioritized translating articles that described camp life. Some of the stories were not translated due to the difficulty of the older German language.
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"Orgelsdorfer Eulenspiegel" was a literary magazine written, illustrated, printed, and distributed by German and German-American prisoners interned at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, during and after World War I. Magazine content includes original and familiar poems, letters, stories, commentary, humor, announcements and reviews of camp events and performances, and colored woodcut illustrations depicting camp life and portraits of prisoners. Portrait subjects include Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Karl Muck, geneticist Richard Goldschmidt, writer Hanns Heinz Ewers, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conductor Ernst Kunwald, and physicist Jonathan Zenneck. Early issues reference the impact of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 (the "Spanish Flu") on the camp. English translations were created by Helen Groh and Daniela Gunthe. Groh and Gunth prioritized translating articles that described camp life. Some of the stories were not translated due to the difficulty of the older German language.
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"Orgelsdorfer Eulenspiegel" was a literary magazine written, illustrated, printed, and distributed by German and German-American prisoners interned at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, during and after World War I. Magazine content includes original and familiar poems, letters, stories, commentary, humor, announcements and reviews of camp events and performances, and colored woodcut illustrations depicting camp life and portraits of prisoners. Portrait subjects include Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Karl Muck, geneticist Richard Goldschmidt, writer Hanns Heinz Ewers, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conductor Ernst Kunwald, and physicist Jonathan Zenneck. Early issues reference the impact of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 (the "Spanish Flu") on the camp. English translations were created by Helen Groh and Daniela Gunthe. Groh and Gunth prioritized translating articles that described camp life. Some of the stories were not translated due to the difficulty of the older German language.
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"Orgelsdorfer Eulenspiegel" was a literary magazine written, illustrated, printed, and distributed by German and German-American prisoners interned at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, during and after World War I. Magazine content includes original and familiar poems, letters, stories, commentary, humor, announcements and reviews of camp events and performances, and colored woodcut illustrations depicting camp life and portraits of prisoners. Portrait subjects include Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Karl Muck, geneticist Richard Goldschmidt, writer Hanns Heinz Ewers, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conductor Ernst Kunwald, and physicist Jonathan Zenneck. Early issues reference the impact of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 (the "Spanish Flu") on the camp. English translations were created by Helen Groh and Daniela Gunthe. Groh and Gunth prioritized translating articles that described camp life. Some of the stories were not translated due to the difficulty of the older German language.
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"Orgelsdorfer Eulenspiegel" was a literary magazine written, illustrated, printed, and distributed by German and German-American prisoners interned at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, during and after World War I. Magazine content includes original and familiar poems, letters, stories, commentary, humor, announcements and reviews of camp events and performances, and colored woodcut illustrations depicting camp life and portraits of prisoners. Portrait subjects include Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Karl Muck, geneticist Richard Goldschmidt, writer Hanns Heinz Ewers, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conductor Ernst Kunwald, and physicist Jonathan Zenneck. Early issues reference the impact of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 (the "Spanish Flu") on the camp. English translations were created by Helen Groh and Daniela Gunthe. Groh and Gunth prioritized translating articles that described camp life. Some of the stories were not translated due to the difficulty of the older German language.
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"Orgelsdorfer Eulenspiegel" was a literary magazine written, illustrated, printed, and distributed by German and German-American prisoners interned at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, during and after World War I. Magazine content includes original and familiar poems, letters, stories, commentary, humor, announcements and reviews of camp events and performances, and colored woodcut illustrations depicting camp life and portraits of prisoners. Portrait subjects include Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Karl Muck, geneticist Richard Goldschmidt, writer Hanns Heinz Ewers, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conductor Ernst Kunwald, and physicist Jonathan Zenneck. Early issues reference the impact of the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 (the "Spanish Flu") on the camp. English translations were created by Helen Groh and Daniela Gunthe. Groh and Gunth prioritized translating articles that described camp life. Some of the stories were not translated due to the difficulty of the older German language.
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Street map of Chattanooga, Tennessee, detailing the transportation infrastructure of the city, shortly after the completion of the Chickamauga Dam. The map names roads, schools, churches, neighborhoods, cemeteries, factories, and streetcar and bus lines. Insets: Downtown Chattanooga -- Map of Chickamauga Park. Includes indexes to streets, suburbs, communities, and points of interest below map. Relief shown by hachures. Shows northwest corner of Georgia including Fairyland and Rossville. Rudolph Julius Shutting was born in Chattanooga on August 16, 1878, the child of Latvian immigrants. He served in the Spanish-American War and registered for World War I and later in the United States Engineers' office. In the 1920's he began creating maps of Chattanooga, including street maps and bird's-eye views of the city. He died in 1951.
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Plat maps with index. Maps show lot and block numbers, dimensions, street widths, names of property owners, churches, cemeteries, mills, schools, roads, railroads, lakes, ponds, rivers, and streams.
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Plat maps with index; includes portions of Hamilton County, Tennessee; and Catoosa County, Dade County, and Walker County, Georgia. Maps show lot and block numbers, dimensions, street widths, names of property owners, churches, cemeteries, mills, schools, roads, railroads, lakes, ponds, rivers, and streams.
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Plat maps with index. Maps show lot and block numbers, dimensions, street widths, names of property owners, churches, cemeteries, mills, schools, roads, railroads, lakes, ponds, rivers, and streams.
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Plat maps with index. Maps show lot and block numbers, dimensions, street widths, names of property owners, churches, cemeteries, mills, schools, roads, railroads, lakes, ponds, rivers, and streams.
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Fire insurance maps depict buildings, coded by color to represent their material composition, and labeled according to their use. A street index and key are provided.
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Map of the Belvoir Place development of Chattanooga, Tenneessee. Map indicates "planned and supervised by C. T. Chamberlain."
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Scrapbook containing advertisements for Cavalier Corporation primarily for furniture and cedar chests. The company was started in 1905 as Odorless Refrigerator Company. Name changed to Tennessee Furniture Company in 1919, and then to Cavalier Corporation in 1938. Maker of vending machines, appliances and furniture, located at E.9th Street (later Martin Luther King Boulevard) and Central Avenue, Chattanooga, Tennessee from 1905-2000.
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Photograph of Helen Whiteside Watkins, born August 17, 1849 and died January 13, 1928. Her father was James Whiteside, part of St. Elmo development, and her husband was Richard Watkins.
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Photograph of Lorenzo "Lon" Warner, managing editor of the journal The Tradesman, published in Chattanooga, Tennessee. His wife, Lillian, was a social editor with the Chattanooga News.
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Photo of Francis Marion Walker, born in Kentucky on November 12, 1827 and died on July 22, 1864 during the Battle of Atlanta. He moved to Chattanooga in 1854 and practiced law and served on the alderman board from 1858-1859. Walker was attorney general for the Tennessee 4th District until the start of the Civil War. General Walker led the 19th Tennessee Regiment of the Confederacy.
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Photograph of Frederick Virgin, born about 1844 in England and died June 15, 1926. He immigrated to the U. S. in 1873.He worked as auditor for Railway Express Company in Chattanooga, Tennessee.