Browse Items (1020 total)
- Collection: Charles Wasson Photo Collection
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Maude Embree
This is the glass negative of Maude Embree. The photo was taken by Charles Wasson of Wasson Studios in Decatur, IL in the early 1900s.
B.E. English - World War I Uniform
These are the glass negatives of B.E. English, a U.S. Army soldier during World War I in his uniform. The photo was taken by Charles Wasson of Wasson Studios in Decatur, IL around 1918.
Mrs. A. Ernst - Baby
This is the glass negative of Mrs. A. Ernst's baby. The photo was taken by Charles Wasson of Wasson Studios in Decatur, IL in the early 1900s.
C.E. Evans - Family
These are the glass negatives of C.E. Evan's family. One shows two boys, while the second is the family group, including man, woman, and 2 children. The photos were taken by Charles Wasson of Wasson Studios in Decatur, IL on July 10, c. 1915.
Earl R. Evans - Family
This is the glass negative of Earl R. Evans' family. The photograph includes a man, woman, 2 boys, and a girl. The photo was taken by Charles Wasson of Wasson Studios in Decatur, IL in the early 1900s.
Estella Evans
This is the glass negative of Estella Evans. The photo was taken by Charles Wasson of Wasson Studios in Decatur IL in the early 1900s.
Flora Evans - Older Lady
This is the glass negative of a copy of a photograph of an older lady. The photo was taken by Charles Wasson of Wasson Studios in Decatur, IL. The copy was taken in the early 1900s for Flora Evans. The original photograph was taken around 1890.
Gertrude Darrett Evans - Millikin University Music Faculty
This is the glass negative of Gertrude Darrett Evans, a member of the Millikin University Music Faculty. The photo was taken by Charles Wasson of Wasson Studios in Decatur, IL in the early 1900s.
Emma Ewing
This is the glass negative of Emma Ewing. The photo was taken by Charles Wasson of Wasson Studios in Decatur, IL in the early 1900s.
M.A. Fahrnkopf - Man & Woman
This is the glass negative of a man and a woman that was taken by Charles Wasson of Wasson Studios in Decatur, IL in the early 1900s for M.A. Fahrnkopf.