SCARCE NEWS INS NEWS SERVICE: US President Franklin D Roosevelt WWII News Photo


SCARCE NEWS INS NEWS SERVICE: US President Franklin D Roosevelt WWII News Photo

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SCARCE NEWS INS NEWS SERVICE: US President Franklin D Roosevelt WWII News Photo:
$35.00


SCARCE NEWS INS NEWS SERVICE: US President Franklin D Roosevelt WWII News PhotoEXTREMELY RARE NEWS SERVICE PHOTO: Silver print of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Approximately 8-1/2 x 6-1/2. Features the president and sons on vacation during his presidency. INP photos with attached paper slug. Circa 1934.TheSeminoleare aNative Americanpeople originally fromFlorida. Today, they principally live inOklahomawith a minority in Florida, and comprise threefederally recognized tribes: theSeminole Tribe of Oklahoma, theSeminole Tribe of Florida, andMiccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida, as well as independent groups. The Seminole nation emerged in a process ofethnogenesisfrom various Native American groups who settled inFloridain the 18th century, most significantly northernMuscogee(Creeks) from what is nowGeorgiaandAlabama.[1]The wordSeminoleis derived from the Creek word \"simanó-li\", which may itself be derived from the Spanish wordcimarrón, meaning \"runaway\" or \"wild one\"TheInternational News Service(INS) was a U.S.-basednews agency(newswire) founded by newspaper publisherWilliam Randolph Hearstin 1909.[1]Established two years after Hearst-competitorE.W. Scrippscombined three smaller syndicates under his control intoUnited Press Associations,[2]INS battled the other major newswires. It added a picture service,International News Photos,orINP.The HearstnewsreelseriesHearst Metrotone News(1914–1967) was released asInternational Newsreelfrom January 1919 to July 1929. Always a distant third to its larger rivals theAssociated Pressand theUnited Press,INSwas merged withUPon May 24, 1958, to becomeUPI.New York City\'s all-news radio station,WINS, then under Hearst ownership, took its call letters from INS,[3]as did the short-lived (1948–49),DuMont Television Networknightly newscast,I.N.S. Telenews.Among those who worked for INS were future broadcastersWilliam Shirer,Edwin Newman,Bob Clark,Freeman Fulbright, andIrving R. Levine, who in 1950 covered the outbreak of war in Korea for INS.[4]Marion Carpenter, the first woman national press photographer to cover Washington, D.C. and the White House, and to travel with a US President, also had worked for the INS.[5]Universal Service, another Hearst-owned news agency, merged with International News Service in 1937.(#564)

SCARCE NEWS INS NEWS SERVICE: US President Franklin D Roosevelt WWII News Photo:
$35.00

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