Soldiers
Found in 321 Collections and/or Records:
Soldiers with Mrs. Rose, 1950 December
Soldiers who were patients at Fitzsimmons Army Hospital with Mrs. Rose, mother of General Maurice Rose. The portrait was taken in December 1950 at an annual General Rose Hospital Dinner. Pictured from left to right are Tom Fitzgerald, Leyden Chiles Wickersham, Frank G. Girgen Jr., James A. Porter and Lawrence A. Snyder.
The Denver Clarion, vol. 71, issue 16, 1966 November 11
Rusk Appearance Certain as Degree Protest Mounts. LSD-Use to be Crime, Panel Tells DU Students. A and S Commission Head Gives Academic Conflict as Reason for Resignation. As Viet War Escalates – Students Soon to Become Soldiers. Johnson-McFarlane Asks for Working Fire Alarm.
The Inevitable , 1944
Image depicts an individual with an "MP" arm band.
Three Men Cleaning Up, 1945 February 25
A pen and ink work depicting daily life in the morning at the camp with men washing up and reading a paper next to a tree with mountains visible in the distance.
Top of Mountain Where Germans Were Found, and Snow Cave with Jacques Parker's Runner who was from Pennsylvania , c. 1940s
Two drawings included. The image on the right is a pencil on paper drawing of a soldier attempting to sleep without a blanket in a snow cave on the first night of an assault, with the treads of the boots pointed out to the viewer extending from the cave. The image on the left is a pen and ink drawing of German soldiers surrendering on the top of the mountain, with soldiers training guns on them in the background.
Two Pictures of Climbing the Mountain, c. 1940s
Two pen and ink drawings on a single sheet of paper depicting the journey of the assault group, which included Parker, climbing up a mountain at night with the moon visible above the peaks to their left.
What a Time!, 1945
A pen and ink drawing of two frolicking men walking jauntily down the street, one smoking and the other holding a bottle, rendered in a nighttime scene as if watching them walk home from a night on the town.
World War I Bible with Notations, 1918-1919
Readings from the Holy Scriptures for Jewish Soldiers and Sailors with diary entries on the inside cover pages. Sidney Israelski was an American soldier in the First Corps Artillery Park, Truck Unit Two, Third Army Corps of the American Expeditionary Forces. The entries begin with his enlistment on January 15, 1918 and ends with Beaufort, Luxembourg on December 1, 1918. ''Compliments of Jewish Welfare Board'' and handwritten around ''Jewish'' is ''Truck Co. #2 - 1st C.A.P.''
World War I Dog Tags
The two World War I dog tags are circular and have a hole at the top. "Sidney Israelske, Cpl." is engraved on the front sides of the dog tags. "Sgt." has been scratched on the front of both tags. The number 1877169 is engraved on the back sides of the tags. The initial "1" is upside down on one of the tags. Sidney Israelski was in the United States Army during World War I.