manuel cohen

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  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_103.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_102.JPG
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_101.jpg
  • View from Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_100.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_098.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_097.jpg
  • Ruins of the Great House Pueblo at the Chaco Pueblo site at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_094.jpg
  • The Great Kiva, built c. 1084, a large round ceremonial room with central fire pit, diverting stone and ventilation shaft, rebuilt in 1972, at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_093.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left) in the evening, at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_092.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_091.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_089.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_090.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_088.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_087.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_086.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_085.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_084.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_083.jpg
  • Man taking a photograph on the ridge with Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_082.jpg
  • Ruins of the Great House Pueblo and kiva at the Chaco Pueblo site at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_080.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_081.jpg
  • Ruins of the Great House Pueblo and kiva at the Chaco Pueblo site at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_079.jpg
  • Ruins of the Great House Pueblo and kiva at the Chaco Pueblo site at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA, and smoke from a wildfire. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_078.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (left) and Companion Rock (right), with a full moon rising, at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. Every 18.6 years, the moon pauses and rises in the same place for 3 years, between Chimney Rock and Companion Rock as viewed from the Great House Pueblo, in a Major Lunar Standstill. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Howard Rowe / Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_076.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (left) and Companion Rock (right), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Howard Rowe / Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_075.jpg
  • The Great Kiva, built c. 1084, a large round ceremonial room with central fire pit, diverting stone and ventilation shaft, rebuilt in 1972, at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_099.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_096.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_095.jpg
  • Chimney Rock (right) and Companion Rock (left), at Chimney Rock National Monument, in Chimney Rock State Park, in San Juan National Forest, South West Colorado, USA. The ridge was an ancestral Puebloan site occupied 925-1125 AD by around 2000 Indians. Chimney Rock was made a National Monument in 2012 and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_077.jpg
  • Castle Rock Pueblo, site of an Anasazi settlement 1250–1275, with Great Houses, 16 kivas, 40 rooms, 9 towers, and a D-shaped enclosure, at the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Canyons of the Ancients National Monument encompasses most of the Hovenweep National Monument and protects over 6000 archaeological sites. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_119.JPG
  • Castle Rock Pueblo, site of an Anasazi settlement 1250–1275, with Great Houses, 16 kivas, 40 rooms, 9 towers, and a D-shaped enclosure, at the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Canyons of the Ancients National Monument encompasses most of the Hovenweep National Monument and protects over 6000 archaeological sites. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_120.jpg
  • Castle Rock Pueblo, site of an Anasazi settlement 1250–1275, with Great Houses, 16 kivas, 40 rooms, 9 towers, and a D-shaped enclosure, at the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Canyons of the Ancients National Monument encompasses most of the Hovenweep National Monument and protects over 6000 archaeological sites. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_118.jpg
  • Petroglyphs, images etched into the rock face, by the Basketmaker people, 500-750 AD, at the Ismay Rock Shelter in the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Basketmaker were pre-Puebloan people who lived in this area from 1500 BC. The rock shelter itself consists of a sleeping area underneath a rock overhang, whose surfaces are covered with petroglyphs including animals, spirals and long scribe lines. The Canyons of the Ancients National Monument encompasses most of the Hovenweep National Monument and protects over 6000 archaeological sites. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_053.jpg
  • West wall of Hovenweep Castle, Square Tower group, built 1150-1350, Little Ruin Canyon, Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Square Tower group housed up to 500 people and includes towers, residential areas, kivas and storage rooms. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_122.jpg
  • Twin Towers, Square Tower group, built 1150-1350, Little Ruin Canyon, Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Square Tower group housed up to 500 people and includes towers, residential areas, kivas and storage rooms. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_131.jpg
  • Ruins of Ancestral Puebloan villages at Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_129.jpg
  • Twin Towers, Square Tower group, built 1150-1350, Little Ruin Canyon, Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Square Tower group housed up to 500 people and includes towers, residential areas, kivas and storage rooms. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_130.jpg
  • Ruins of Ancestral Puebloan villages at Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. In the distance is Ute mountain which is sacred to the Ute Indians, representing a sleeping form of a Great Warrior God, who according to legend, fell asleep while recovering from wounds received in a great battle with the Evil Ones. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_128.jpg
  • Hovenweep Castle, Square Tower group, built 1150-1350, Little Ruin Canyon, Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Square Tower group housed up to 500 people and includes towers, residential areas, kivas and storage rooms. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_127.jpg
  • Hovenweep Castle, Square Tower group, built 1150-1350, Little Ruin Canyon, Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Square Tower group housed up to 500 people and includes towers, residential areas, kivas and storage rooms. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_126.jpg
  • Hovenweep Castle, Square Tower group, built 1150-1350, Little Ruin Canyon, Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Square Tower group housed up to 500 people and includes towers, residential areas, kivas and storage rooms. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_125.jpg
  • West wall of Hovenweep Castle, Square Tower group, built 1150-1350, Little Ruin Canyon, Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Square Tower group housed up to 500 people and includes towers, residential areas, kivas and storage rooms. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_123.jpg
  • Hovenweep Castle, Square Tower group, built 1150-1350, Little Ruin Canyon, Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Square Tower group housed up to 500 people and includes towers, residential areas, kivas and storage rooms. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_132.jpg
  • West wall of Hovenweep Castle, Square Tower group, built 1150-1350, Little Ruin Canyon, Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. The Square Tower group housed up to 500 people and includes towers, residential areas, kivas and storage rooms. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_124.jpg
  • Ruins of Ancestral Puebloan villages at Hovenweep National Monument, Colorado, USA. This area has been settled by Native Americans from 6000 BC until the 14th century AD and currently houses the ruins of 6 Anasazi Puebloan villages from the 13th century. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_121.jpg
  • America First poster by the National Americanization Committee and the US Bureau of Education, encouraging immigrants to learn English, attend night school and become a US citizen, 1919, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. In 1910, the YWCA established its first International Institute providing English classes, an employment bureau and citizenship assistance. By 1919, 62 Institutes covering 36 languages had been established. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_042.jpg
  • Advertisement for passenger ships to New York, Baltimore and Galveston, Texas, by Karesh & Stotzky, a money exchange and banklist firm in Bremen, Germany, 1906, from the National Archives, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_030.jpg
  • Plan in section of the SS Deutschland, detail, a four-funnel ocean liner of the German Hamburg America Line carrying 2050 passengers, 1906, from an advertising brochure, from the National Archives, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_024.jpg
  • Plan in section of the SS Deutschland, a four-funnel ocean liner of the German Hamburg America Line carrying 2050 passengers, 1906, from an advertising brochure, from the National Archives, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_023.jpg
  • Immigrants arriving in America, photograph, 1908, by Lewis Hine, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_095.jpg
  • Immigrants arriving at Ellis Island on a ship, photograph, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_094.jpg
  • Baggage hall, with displays of trunks used by immigrants, in the National Immigration Museum, on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_069.jpg
  • Interpreters sitting next to the immigrants while immigration officers examine their documents, in the Registry Room, photograph, c. 1912, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_066.jpg
  • Medical and surgical instruments used in the examination of immigrants, c. 1910-15, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_065.jpg
  • Medical and surgical instruments used in the examination of immigrants, and behind, photograph of a woman during a medical examination, c. 1910-15, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_064.jpg
  • Passport of an Italian immigrant, early 20th century, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_040.jpg
  • Display of posters and information on transport, in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_038.jpg
  • Sheet music cover of 'O! Close the Gates', 1923, featuring anti immigration songs with the lyrics, 'O, what will become of our country in a few more years to be, if foreign immigration isn't barred from the USA?', displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_037.jpg
  • Anti immigration march by the Ku Klux Klan in Long Branch, New Jersey, 4th July 1924, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_035.jpg
  • The Modern Moses, cartoon published in Puck, 1881, criticised by the editor of the Jewish Messenger for its use of German and Austrian anti-semitic caricatures to render eastern Europe Jewish immigrants, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_033.jpg
  • 'The US Badly Needs a Bouncer', xenophobic cartoon by J Heppler, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Fears of internal subversion by foreign ideologies such as anarchism, socialism, and communism reached a height during World War I and the postwar period. Fenianism, also mentioned in the cartoon, supported the overthrow of British rule in Ireland. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_032.jpg
  • Registry Room of the main building, with queueing immigrants waiting to be processed, photograph, c. 1910, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. The registry hall was designed by William Alciphron Boring and Edward Lippincott Tilton and built early 20th century in French Renaissance style. It measures 61x30m and was used for primary inspections, with adjoining rooms used as dormitories and offices. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_029.jpg
  • Castle Garden Immigration Station, New York City, where more than 8 million immigrants were processed 1855-90, (copyright New York City Public Library), photograph, c. 1890, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_028.jpg
  • Immigrant children waving American flags, photograph, c. 1910, in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_026.jpg
  • Immigrant children waving American flags, photograph, c. 1910, in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_027.jpg
  • Display of posters and information on transport, in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_020.jpg
  • Silent Voices, a display of furnishings used in the processing of immigrants, left abandoned <br />
after the closure of Ellis Island in 1954 until restoration work began in the 1980s, in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_015.jpg
  • Display of black and white photographs of immigrants and their families, in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_013.jpg
  • Displays in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_012.jpg
  • Display of black and white photographs of immigrants and their families, in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_014.jpg
  • Baggage hall, with displays of trunks used by immigrants, in the National Immigration Museum, on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_071.jpg
  • Baggage hall, with displays of trunks used by immigrants, in the National Immigration Museum, on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_070.jpg
  • Baggage hall, with displays of trunks used by immigrants, in the National Immigration Museum, on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_068.jpg
  • Immigration officer carrying out a psychological assessment on a young immigrant to establish his socio-psychological profile, needed for his admission file, in the Legal Inspection room, photograph, c. 1914, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_063.jpg
  • Departure of SS Stavangerfjord, Norwegian-America Line, from Christiania (now Oslo), Norway, with immigrants headed for America, photograph by Anders B Wilse, Norse Folkemuseum, Oslo, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_041.jpg
  • Display of postcards depicting ships used to transport immigrants to America, in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_039.jpg
  • Cartoon of a Native American with a cowering Henry Cabot Lodge, supporter of Anglo-Saxon racial purity and immigration restrictions during the 1890s, who fought for a bill requiring immigrants to pass a literacy test, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_036.jpg
  • Display on social integration of immigrants, in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_034.jpg
  • 'The Fool Pied Piper' cartoon in Puck, 1909, featuring Uncle Sam merrily leading Europe's criminals into America, while European leaders cheer, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_031.jpg
  • Transport display in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Plan in section of the SS President Lincoln, an immigration ship, with 200 1st class cabins, 150 second class cabins, and space for 3000 3rd class travellers (left). Photograph of the ship's inauguration (right). Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_025.jpg
  • Advertisement for a transport company, possibly the Lloyd Italiano Line, founded in 1904 in Genoa for the ocean transport of immigrants to the Americas, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_022.jpg
  • Display of passports belonging to immigrants, in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_021.jpg
  • Third floor of the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_011.jpg
  • Registry Room of the main building, with queueing immigrants waiting to be processed, photograph, c. 1910, displayed in the National Immigration Museum, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. The registry hall was designed by William Alciphron Boring and Edward Lippincott Tilton and built early 20th century in French Renaissance style. It measures 61x30m and was used for primary inspections, with adjoining rooms used as dormitories and offices. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_010.jpg
  • Courtroom, restored as 1911, in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. 10% of immigrants were processed through a legal court procedure on arrival in the country. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_019.jpg
  • Dormitory for detained immigrants, on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Ellis Island and its Immigration Museum are part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument and are managed by the National Park Authority. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_009.jpg
  • Liberty of Poetry, 1883, sculpture by Pio Fedi, monument to Italian poet and patriot Giovanni Battista Niccolini at the Basilica of Santa Croce in Florence, in the exhibition 'Sisters in Liberty: From Florence, Italy to New York, New York', in the main building on Ellis Island, the immigration processing centre for the United States from 1892 to 1954, at the mouth of the Hudson river in New York City, NY, USA. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ELLIS_ISLAND_MC_016.jpg
  • Monumental staircase leading to the exhibition hall in the Manufacture des Gobelins, or Gobelins Manufactory, a historic tapestry factory, built by Jean-Camille Formige in 1912 after a fire in 1871, on the Avenue des Gobelins in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. In 1662 Jean-Baptiste Colbert took over the factory to provide tapestries and furniture for the French royal family, and tapestries are still produced here using traditional techniques. Les Gobelins is now part of Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_259.jpg
  • Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture and administers the Gobelins Manufactory and Beauvais Manufactory, both historic tapestry workshops, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. In the foreground in the Cour Colbert is the Monument a Colbert, a bronze statue, 1894, by Jean-Paul Aube, 1837-1916, of Jean-Baptiste Colbert, 1619-83. On the left is the house of Charles Le Brun, 1619-90, French artist and first director of the Gobelins under Louis XIV. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_256.jpg
  • Monument a Colbert, a bronze statue, 1894, by Jean-Paul Aube, 1837-1916, of Jean-Baptiste Colbert, 1619-83, in the Cour Colbert at Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture and administers the Gobelins Manufactory and Beauvais Manufactory, both historic tapestry workshops, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. Behind is the chapel, Chapelle Saint-Louis, built 1723, and the dyeing workshop, where chemist Eugene Chevreul, 1786-1889, worked in the 19th century, and still in use today. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_102.jpg
  • Monument a Colbert, a bronze statue, 1894, by Jean-Paul Aube, 1837-1916, of Jean-Baptiste Colbert, 1619-83, in the Cour Colbert at Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture and administers the Gobelins Manufactory and Beauvais Manufactory, both historic tapestry workshops, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. Behind is the chapel, Chapelle Saint-Louis, built in 1723 for the Gobelins weavers, now housing a collection of heritage tapestries and works by contemporary artists such as Combas and Kijno and Vincent Bioules. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_101.jpg
  • Monument a Colbert, a bronze statue, 1894, by Jean-Paul Aube, 1837-1916, of Jean-Baptiste Colbert, 1619-83, in the Cour Colbert at Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture and administers the Gobelins Manufactory and Beauvais Manufactory, both historic tapestry workshops, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_100.jpg
  • Monument a Colbert, a bronze statue, 1894, by Jean-Paul Aube, 1837-1916, of Jean-Baptiste Colbert, 1619-83, in the Cour Colbert at Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture and administers the Gobelins Manufactory and Beauvais Manufactory, both historic tapestry workshops, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. Behind is the house of Charles Le Brun, 1619-90, French artist and first director of the Gobelins under Louis XIV. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_014.jpg
  • La Fileuse, or The Spinner, by Louis Convers, 1 of 4 relief medallions depicting skills needed in the production of tapestries, on the facade of the Manufacture des Gobelins, or Gobelins Manufactory, a historic tapestry factory, built by Jean-Camille Formige in 1912 after a fire in 1871, on the Avenue des Gobelins in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. In 1662 Jean-Baptiste Colbert took over the factory to provide tapestries and furniture for the French royal family, and tapestries are still produced here using traditional techniques. Les Gobelins is now part of Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_258.jpg
  • Le Carton, or The Drawer, by Jean Hugues, 1 of 4 relief medallions depicting skills needed in the production of tapestries, on the facade of the Manufacture des Gobelins, or Gobelins Manufactory, a historic tapestry factory, built by Jean-Camille Formige in 1912 after a fire in 1871, on the Avenue des Gobelins in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. In 1662 Jean-Baptiste Colbert took over the factory to provide tapestries and furniture for the French royal family, and tapestries are still produced here using traditional techniques. Les Gobelins is now part of Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_251.jpg
  • Caryatid statue, 1913, by Jean-Antonin Injalbert, 1845-1933, on the facade of the Manufacture des Gobelins, or Gobelins Manufactory, a historic tapestry factory, built by Jean-Camille Formige in 1912 after a fire in 1871, on the Avenue des Gobelins in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. In 1662 Jean-Baptiste Colbert took over the factory to provide tapestries and furniture for the French royal family, and tapestries are still produced here using traditional techniques. Les Gobelins is now part of Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_253.jpg
  • Caryatid statues, 1913-14, by Jean-Antonin Injalbert, 1845-1933, on the facade of the Manufacture des Gobelins, or Gobelins Manufactory, a historic tapestry factory, built by Jean-Camille Formige in 1912 after a fire in 1871, on the Avenue des Gobelins in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. In 1662 Jean-Baptiste Colbert took over the factory to provide tapestries and furniture for the French royal family, and tapestries are still produced here using traditional techniques. Les Gobelins is now part of Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_254.jpg
  • La Fileuse, or The Spinner, by Louis Convers, 1 of 4 relief medallions depicting skills needed in the production of tapestries, on the facade of the Manufacture des Gobelins, or Gobelins Manufactory, a historic tapestry factory, built by Jean-Camille Formige in 1912 after a fire in 1871, on the Avenue des Gobelins in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. In 1662 Jean-Baptiste Colbert took over the factory to provide tapestries and furniture for the French royal family, and tapestries are still produced here using traditional techniques. Les Gobelins is now part of Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_258.jpg
  • La Tapisserie, or The Weaver, by Jean Hugues, 1 of 4 relief medallions depicting skills needed in the production of tapestries, on the facade of the Manufacture des Gobelins, or Gobelins Manufactory, a historic tapestry factory, built by Jean-Camille Formige in 1912 after a fire in 1871, on the Avenue des Gobelins in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. In 1662 Jean-Baptiste Colbert took over the factory to provide tapestries and furniture for the French royal family, and tapestries are still produced here using traditional techniques. Les Gobelins is now part of Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_250.jpg
  • Triumph of Art, allegorical bas relief, 1915, by Paul Landowski, 1875-1961, on the facade of the Manufacture des Gobelins, or Gobelins Manufactory, a historic tapestry factory, built by Jean-Camille Formige in 1912 after a fire in 1871, on the Avenue des Gobelins in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France. In 1662 Jean-Baptiste Colbert took over the factory to provide tapestries and furniture for the French royal family, and tapestries are still produced here using traditional techniques. Les Gobelins is now part of Le Mobilier National, which commissions and conserves state furniture. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_PARIS_MC_252.jpg
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