MEDIUM: 1 photographic print on cream mount : platinum. CREATED, PUBLISHED: [1905], Works published prior to 1978 were copyright protected for a maximum of 75 years. See Circular 1 "COPYRIGHT BASICS" from the U.S. Copyright Office. Works published before 1923 are now in the public domain. (Free for commercial use)
NOTES: Published titles: Motherhood & Mother and child. Image content features: MODELS--Beatrice Baxter Ruyl & Ruth Ruyl; MONOGRAM ON RECTO--"FHD 1905" pencil, lower left; PEOPLE--Women, infants, girls, families. Title and other data comes from a curatorial worksheet compiled at LC in 1992-93.
Forms part of the Louise Imogen Guiney Collection. Cite as: The Louise Imogen Guiney Collection, Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division. Transfer; Manuscript Division; 1934 (DLC/PP-1934:33). Anonymous gift to the Library of Congress, 1934.
Carnation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Virgin Mary shed tears at Jesus' plight, and carnations sprang up from where her tears fell. Thus the pink carnation became the symbol of a mother's undying love, and in 1907 was chosen by Ann Jarvis as the emblem of Mother's Day, now observed in the United States and Canada on the second Sunday in May. A red carnation may be worn if one's mother is alive, and a white one if she has died.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article, Carnation
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