Treasury, Internal Reverend Chemist G.F. Beyer
Summary
Title from unverified data provided by the National Photo Company on the negatives or negative sleeves.
Date from caption list.
Caption from caption list: Activities on the Internal Revenue Bureau to enforce prohibition. A Revenue Stamp is a revenue stamp for that, in the eyes of the average bootlegger. The one who sold this half pint bottle for $4.00 used a 1 quart stamp he had steamed off another bottle. This sample which was turned in by a revenue agent contained water colored with burnt sugar.
Gift; Herbert A. French; 1947.
General information about the National Photo Company collection is available at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.npco
This glass negative might show streaks and other blemishes resulting from a natural deterioration in the original coatings.
Temp. note: Batch one.
During the administrations of Presidents Wilson, Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover, the National Photo Company supplied photographs of current news events in Washington, D.C., as a daily service to its subscribers. It also prepared sets of pictures on popular subjects and undertook special photographic assignments for local businesses and government agencies. The bulk of the images were created between 1909 and 1932. The photographic files of the National Photo Company, including an estimated 80,000 images (photographic prints and corresponding glass negatives), were acquired by the Library from its proprietor Herbert E. French in 1947.
- Prohibition in the United States | PICRYL - Public Domain Media ...
- Prohibition in the United States | PICRYL - Public Domain Media ...
- Treasury, Internal Reverend Chemist G.F. Beyer - PICRYL
- 799 Prohibition Images - LOC's Public Domain Image Collections
- Treasury, Internal Reverend Chemist G.F. Beyer
- 9196 The Prohibition Stock Photos and High-res Pictures
- Treasury, Internal Rev. Chemist G.F. Beyer | Library of Congress
- 1462 Us Bureau Of Alcohol Stock Photos & High-Res Pictures
- 2004 Bureau Of Alcohol Stock Photos, High-Res Pictures, and Images
- During Prohibition, Federal Chemists Used Poison To Stop, 49% OFF