Five hundred and four pounds of unexploded dynamite and pyrotol found throughout the basement of the unwrecked portion of the Bath School (immediately after the building exploded on the morning of May 18, 1927). The dynamite and pyrotol were found by Michigan State Troopers Lieutenant Donald McNaughton & Ernest Halderman, Assistant Chief of the Michigan Secret Service Department of Public Safety Lieutenant Lyle W. Morse and Assistant Chief of the Lansing Fire Department Paul Lefke.
التاريخ
on or after May 19, 1927
المصدر
The Bath School Disaster by MJ Ellsworth
المؤلف
unknown photographer - it looks like there might be some type of label or credit in the bottom right hand corner of the photo but if writing is there it is unreadable/illegible
Copyright asserted (though apparently not registered with the US Copyright Office) in Ellsworth's 1927 edition/printing but not renewed in 1954/55/56.
Searches of the Stanford copyright renewal database at https://exhibits.stanford.edu/copyrightrenewals for "Ellsworth", "Bath", "Bath School", "Bath School disaster", "National Editorial Association"/"Associated Press" (source of many of the newspaper photos), "Leavenworth Photographic Co., "Leavenworth", "Van/Van's/Van Photos" provided no renewal data. (Leavenworth Photos and Van's are two photography companies that took some of the extant photos of the disaster). Searches of the UPenn database at https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/cce/ and of the various Copyright volumes also provided no pertinent search result
ترخيص
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse
يقع هذ العمل في النَّطاق العامِّ في الولايات المُتحدة الأمريكيَّة لأنَّه نُشِرَ (أو سُجِّل لدى مكتب الولايات المُتحدة لحقوق التَّأليف والنَّشر) قبل ١ يناير ١٩٢٩.
صفحة الوصف الأصلية كانت هنا، تشير جميع أسماء المستخدمين التالية إلى en.wikipedia.
Upload date | User | Bytes | Dimensions | Comment
2007-07-21 01:52 (UTC) | The Mystery Man | 50209 (bytes) | 584×411 | http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~bauerle/disaster.htm {{Non-free historic image}}
Note: Even though the original uploader stated that the image's source was the freepages/bauerle URL above, the actual and original source was MJ Ellsworth's book, which was published in 1927 and predates the internet by several decades.