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Lewis Wickes Hine Collection (page 3)

Lewis Wickes Hine was an American photographer and sociologist

177 items

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Powerhouse Mechanic, c. 1924 (b / w photo)

Powerhouse Mechanic, c. 1924 (b / w photo)
875297 Powerhouse Mechanic, c.1924 (b/w photo) by Hine, Lewis Wickes (1874-1940); Private Collection; (add.info.: Lewis Wickes Hine (1874 - 1940) was an American sociologist and photographer

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Young women sorting papers in a storeroom, c. 1905 (b / w photo)

Young women sorting papers in a storeroom, c. 1905 (b / w photo)
872443 Young women sorting papers in a storeroom, c.1905 (b/w photo) by Hine, Lewis Wickes (1874-1940); Private Collection; The Stapleton Collection; American, out of copyright

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Young boy in a workshop c. 1936 (b / w photo)

Young boy in a workshop c. 1936 (b / w photo)
1126602 Young boy in a workshop c.1936 (b/w photo) by Hine, Lewis Wickes (1874-1940); Private Collection; (add.info.: Lewis Wickes Hine (1874 - 1940) was an American sociologist and photographer

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of nine students working in an industrial shop class at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Tony Casale, 'Bologna, '11 years old been selling newspapers for 4 years

Tony Casale, "Bologna, "11 years old been selling newspapers for 4 years
Tony Casale, " Bologna, " 11 years old been selling newspapers for 4 years, Hartford, Connecticut, March 1909, 3348

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Mery Horn, a hunchback condition aggravated by the heavy load of papers she carried

Mery Horn, a hunchback condition aggravated by the heavy load of papers she carried. Hartford, Connecticut, March 1909, 3348

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Lena Lochiavo - 11 years old, basket (and pretzel) seller

Lena Lochiavo - 11 years old, basket (and pretzel) seller, at Sixth Street Market in front of saloon entrance, Cincinnati, Ohio, 3136

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: John Pento, 14 years old, Daniel and Angelo Pento, 7 years old, selling newspapers

John Pento, 14 years old, Daniel and Angelo Pento, 7 years old, selling newspapers, Hartford, Connecticut, 3348

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Hartford Newsboys, 1909. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Hartford Newsboys, 1909. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
Hartford Newsboys, 1909

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Edward St. Germain and his sister Delia, mill workers, Phoenix, Rhode Island, April 1909

Edward St. Germain and his sister Delia, mill workers, Phoenix, Rhode Island, April 1909, 3379

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Addie Card, 12 years old. Spinner in cotton mill, North Pownal, Vermont, 1910

Addie Card, 12 years old. Spinner in cotton mill, North Pownal, Vermont, 1910

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Wagon boy or 'tail boy'helping to load the wagon, c. 1914

Wagon boy or "tail boy"helping to load the wagon, c. 1914
Wagon boy or " tail boy" helping to load the wagon, c. 1914

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Soldier Thrown in Air, 1917. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Soldier Thrown in Air, 1917. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
Soldier Thrown in Air, 1917

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Workers at the Construction of Empire State Building, 1932

Workers at the Construction of Empire State Building, 1932. Private Collection

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Rivetting the last bolts on The Morning Mast of the Empire State building, c1931

Rivetting the last bolts on The Morning Mast of the Empire State building, c1931. Artist: Lewis Wickes Hine
Rivetting the last bolts on The Morning Mast of the Empire State building, c1931. Rivetting the last bolts on The Morning Mast of the Empire State building

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: The final stages of the Mast; the street is some quarter mile below, c1931

The final stages of the Mast; the street is some quarter mile below, c1931. Artist: Lewis Wickes Hine
The final stages of the Mast; the street is some quarter mile below, c1931. The final stages of the Mast; the street is some quarter mile below

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: The Empire State Building: Skyscraper Workers, c1931. Artist: Lewis Wickes Hine

The Empire State Building: Skyscraper Workers, c1931. Artist: Lewis Wickes Hine
The Empire State Building: Skyscraper Workers, c1931. The Empire State Building was designed by William F. Lamb from the architectural firm Shreve, Lamb and Harmon

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: NYC: TENEMENT LIFE, c1910. A New York City tenement family. Photograph by Lewis Hine

NYC: TENEMENT LIFE, c1910. A New York City tenement family. Photograph by Lewis Hine, c1910

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: SWIMMING HOLE, 1916. A group of teenage boys at a swimming hole after a day of

SWIMMING HOLE, 1916. A group of teenage boys at a swimming hole after a day of working on a tobacco farm at Southwick, Massachusetts. Photograph by Lewis Hine, June 1916

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: MEDICAL EXAM, 1917. School children receiving throat exams at Washington School in Lawton

MEDICAL EXAM, 1917. School children receiving throat exams at Washington School in Lawton, Oklahoma. Photograph by Lewis Wickes Hine, 1917

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: HINE: CHILD LABOR, 1916. Frank Wiegel showing his hand, from which two fingers

HINE: CHILD LABOR, 1916. Frank Wiegel showing his hand, from which two fingers were amputated after it was caught in a machine while he was working at the Henry Bosch Paper Co

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: HINE: CHILD LABOR, 1912. A young cotton mill worker injured by a piece of machinery

HINE: CHILD LABOR, 1912. A young cotton mill worker injured by a piece of machinery that fell on his foot causing him to land on the spinning machine which crushed

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: HINE: CHILD LABOR, 1911. Young textile mill girls at a cotton mill in America

HINE: CHILD LABOR, 1911. Young textile mill girls at a cotton mill in America. Photograph by Lewis Hine, c1911

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: TEXTILE MILL WORKERS, 1908. A group of textile mill workers at the Indianapolis

TEXTILE MILL WORKERS, 1908. A group of textile mill workers at the Indianapolis Cotton Mill in Indianapolis, Indiana. Photograph by Lewis Hine, August 1908

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: HINE: POVERTY, 1911. A young spinner in the Century Cotton Mills in South Boston, Virginia

HINE: POVERTY, 1911. A young spinner in the Century Cotton Mills in South Boston, Virginia. The ten-year-old sister on the right helps with the baby. Photograph by Lewis Hine, June 1911

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: RURAL SCHOOL GIRL, 1921. A country school girl walking barefoot to the Buckeye School

RURAL SCHOOL GIRL, 1921. A country school girl walking barefoot to the Buckeye School, Marlington, West Virginia. Photographed in October 1921 by Lewis Hine

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: CHILD LABOR: COTTON, 1916. Family of cotton pickers in Comanche County, Oklahoma

CHILD LABOR: COTTON, 1916. Family of cotton pickers in Comanche County, Oklahoma. Photograph by Lewis Hine, 1916

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Empire State Building under construction, 1930 (gelatin silver print)

Empire State Building under construction, 1930 (gelatin silver print)
492496 Empire State Building under construction, 1930 (gelatin silver print) by Hine, Lewis Wickes (1874-1940); Private Collection; Photo eChristies Images; American, out of copyright

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Empire State Building under construction, showing a lifting gang at work

Empire State Building under construction, showing a lifting gang at work
2975587 Empire State Building under construction, showing a lifting gang at work, 1930 (b/w photo) by Hine, Lewis Wickes (1874-1940); Private Collection; Peter Newark Pictures; American

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Empire State Building under construction, showing workman taking a break

Empire State Building under construction, showing workman taking a break
2975585 Empire State Building under construction, showing workman taking a break, 1930 (b/w photo) by Hine, Lewis Wickes (1874-1940); Private Collection; Peter Newark Pictures; American

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of men making corn shocks in a field at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of men gathering fruit from an orchard at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of six young men riding on a horse-drawn wagon filled with ears of corn at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of band class at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey. The director, right, has his hands raised in direction

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of a man feeding hogs while another man instructs from the other side of the fence at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of five men performing work on the porch of a building at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A black-and-white print of vocational students learning how to cook and bake at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of a student working a printing press at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of three women learning to be nurses at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of male and female students standing and reading in a library at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of the grounds of the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of a young man wearing a peaked cap and uniform while playing the bugle at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of a man with white hair and a tie smiling, probably a member of staff at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of a man with white hair, wearing a tie, and attending to horses at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine

Untitled, ca. 1935. Creator: Lewis Wickes Hine
A gelatin silver print of a man working on engine at the Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth in Bordentown, New Jersey

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Child labour, c. 1913

Child labour, c. 1913. Private Collection

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: Rivetting the last bolts on The Morning Mast of the Empire State building, c1931

Rivetting the last bolts on The Morning Mast of the Empire State building, c1931. Artist: Lewis Wickes Hine
Rivetting the last bolts on The Morning Mast of the Empire State building, c1931. Rivetting the last bolts on The Morning Mast of the Empire State building

Background imageLewis Wickes Hine Collection: HINE: BOOTBLACK, 1924. A 12-year-old bootblack shining shoes in Bowling Green, New York City

HINE: BOOTBLACK, 1924. A 12-year-old bootblack shining shoes in Bowling Green, New York City, New York. Photograph by Lewis Wickes, Hine, 1924



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Lewis Wickes Hine Collection

Lewis Wickes Hine was an American photographer and sociologist. He is best known for his documentary photography of immigrants and child labor in the early 20th century. His photographs were instrumental in changing public opinion about the need for labor reform, as well as inspiring social justice movements. He also photographed construction sites, factories, and other aspects of industrialization in the United States. His work was published widely in magazines such as National Geographic and The Survey, which helped to bring attention to issues such as poverty and inequality. Hine's photographs are now considered some of the most iconic images of the early 20th century, providing a powerful visual testimony to a time when many people lacked basic rights or access to education or health care.
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Our beautiful Wall Art and Photo Gifts include Framed Prints, Photo Prints, Poster Prints, Canvas Prints, Jigsaw Puzzles, Metal Prints and so much more

The Lewis Wickes Hine collection, available on Media Storehouse, is a stunning selection of photographs capturing the essence of American life in the early 20th century. Hine was an American sociologist and photographer who used his camera to document social issues such as child labor, immigration, and working conditions. His images are both poignant and powerful, providing a glimpse into a bygone era. Media Storehouse offers a range of products featuring Hine's work including wall art, framed prints, photo prints, canvas prints, jigsaw puzzles and greeting cards. Our collection includes iconic images such as "Power House Mechanic Working on Steam Pump" which depicts workers dwarfed by machinery in a power plant. Whether you're looking for historical artwork or simply appreciate the beauty of black-and-white photography, the Lewis Wickes Hine collection is sure to impress. These timeless images offer insight into America's past while reminding us that many social issues still persist today.
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What are Lewis Wickes Hine (Artists Arts) art prints?

Lewis Wickes Hine was an American photographer and sociologist who captured the harsh realities of life in early 20th century America. His photographs were instrumental in bringing about social reform, particularly in child labor laws. We offer a range of Lewis Wickes Hine art prints that showcase his powerful images, which are both poignant and thought-provoking. Hine's work is characterized by its documentary style, capturing everyday people and their struggles with poverty, inequality and injustice. His photographs offer a glimpse into the lives of those who were often overlooked or ignored by society at large. The Lewis Wickes Hine art prints available from Media Storehouse are high-quality reproductions of some of his most iconic images. They make for striking additions to any home or office space, offering a reminder of our shared history and the ongoing struggle for social justice.
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What Lewis Wickes Hine (Artists Arts) art prints can I buy from Media Storehouse?

We offer a wide range of Lewis Wickes Hine art prints that capture the essence of American life during the early 20th century. These prints showcase Hine's talent for capturing poignant moments in time, from images of child laborers to portraits of immigrants arriving at Ellis Island. You can choose from a variety of sizes and formats, including framed or unframed options, to suit your personal taste and decor style. Whether you're looking for a striking black-and-white photograph or a colorful print that celebrates the beauty of everyday life, we have something to offer. With its high-quality printing process and attention to detail, each Lewis Wickes Hine art print is sure to make an impact on any wall it adorns.
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How do I buy Lewis Wickes Hine (Artists Arts) art prints?

To buy Lewis Wickes Hine art prints from Media Storehouse, you can browse our collection of his artwork online. Once you have found a print that you like, simply add it to your cart and proceed to checkout. You will need to provide your shipping and payment information during the checkout process. We offer a wide range of sizes and framing options for their prints, so be sure to select the one that best suits your needs. We also offer a variety of paper types, including fine art paper and canvas. Lewis Wickes Hine was known for his photographs documenting social issues in America during the early 20th century. His work is highly regarded for its historical significance as well as its artistic merit. By purchasing one of his prints from Media Storehouse, you can own a piece of this important legacy while supporting independent artists and photographers.
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How much do Lewis Wickes Hine (Artists Arts) art prints cost?

As a provider of Lewis Wickes Hine art prints, we offer a range of options for customers to choose from. The cost of these prints varies depending on the size and type of print selected. You can choose from a variety of sizes including small, medium, large and extra-large. Additionally, they can select from different types such as canvas or framed prints. The price range for these art prints is competitive and affordable compared to other providers in the market. However, it's important to note that prices may vary based on the specific artwork chosen by the customer. We provide high-quality Lewis Wickes Hine art prints at reasonable prices without compromising on quality. These artworks are perfect for those who appreciate fine art photography and want to add some historical value to our collection or home decor.
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How will my Lewis Wickes Hine (Artists Arts) art prints be delivered to me?

We take great care in ensuring that your Lewis Wickes Hine art prints are delivered to you safely and securely. We use high-quality packaging materials to protect your artwork during transit, including sturdy cardboard tubes for rolled prints and flat cardboard boxes for framed or mounted prints. Our team of experienced professionals carefully handle each print with the utmost care, ensuring that it arrives at your doorstep in pristine condition. We also provide tracking information so that you can keep an eye on the progress of your delivery. Whether you're ordering a single print or multiple pieces, we strive to make the delivery process as smooth and hassle-free as possible. So sit back, relax, and let us take care of getting your beautiful Lewis Wickes Hine art prints safely into your hands.