Завантаження...

Charles Leale - Brady-Handy
 

 

Download top free photographs!

 

This photo was viewed 11 times and was downloaded in full size 2 times.

This photo was liked 0 times


Source page:

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Charles_Leale_-_Brady-Handy.jpg

Summaryedit

Description

Charles Leale. Library of Congress description: "Dr. Charles A. Leale (in U.S. Army uniform) attended Lincoln at death."

Date between 1860 and 1870
Source Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division. Brady-Handy Photograph Collection. https://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cwpbh.03276. CALL NUMBER: LC-BH8266- 3662 <P&P>[P&P]
Author
Permission
(Reusing this file)

PD

US-LibraryOfCongress-BookLogo.svg This image is available from the United States Library of Congress's Prints and Photographs division under the digital ID cwpbh.03276.
This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal copyright tag is still required. See Commons:Licensing for more information.

English: Dr. Charles Augustus Leale Born Mar. 26, 1842 and died Jun. 13, 1932 was an American Civil War union army medical surgeon. He is most notable for attempting to save Abraham Lincoln shortly after he was shot by John Wilkes Booth on April 14, 1865. He first saw Lincoln a few days before the play at Ford's Theatre and found Lincoln's face so interesting he wished to study it. Reading he would attend the theater, he finished duties early and sought a seat that would provide a good view of the president's face. The first doctor to reach Lincoln after the shooting, the 23 year old was given by Mary Todd Lincoln the permission to attend her wounded husband. Dr. Leale found the President slumped over held up by Mary; Lincoln was unconcious and struggling to breathe. Leale performed mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, found the president's head wound and removed the blood clot, which released pressure and allowed his patient to start breathing on his own. He allowed actress https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laura_Keene to cradle the President's head in her lap. The doctor quickly assessed “His wound is mortal; it is impossible for him to recover.”, and ordered that the president be removed from Ford's Theatre to the nearest bed. Lincoln was taken across Tenth Street to the Petersen House where he remained in a coma for approximately nine hours before passing away at 7:22 the next morning. This longer than expected duration was possible due to the good doctor's periodic removal of the wound's forming blood clots. Dr. Leale held Lincoln's hand most of the time, he was holding it when President Lincoln died, and afterwards said that he held the President's hand all night so that, if possible, he would know he was not alone. Leale wouldn't talk about the event until the 100th anniversary of Lincoln's birth in 1909, when he was persuaded to give a speech on the event, because he had a duty to record it for posterity.

(This summary was created using Commons SumItUp) en:Charles_Leale

Licensingedit

Public domain This work is from the Brady-Handy collection at the Library of Congress. According to the library, there are no known copyright restrictions on the use of this work.
Mathew Brady died in 1896 and Levin C. Handy died in 1932. Photographs in this collection are in the public domain in the United States as works published before 1923 or as unpublished works whose copyright term has expired (life of author + 70 years).
US-LibraryOfCongress-BookLogo.svg
Photo's description:
Charles Leale. Library of Congress description: "Dr. Charles A. Leale (in U.S. Army uniform) attended Lincoln at death."


Only registered users can post comments. Please login.


EXIF data:
File name charles_leale___brady_handy.jpg
Size, Mbytes 0.623775390625
Mime type image/jpeg




The pictures at Free-Photos.biz come mainly from Wikimedia Commons or from our own production. The images are either in the public domain, or licensed under free linceses: Free-Photos.biz license, GPL, Creative Commons or Free-Art license. Some very few other photos where uploaded to Free-Photos.biz by our users and released into the public domain or into free usage under another free license (like GPL etc.)

While the copyright and licensing information supplied for each photo is believed to be accurate, Free-Photos.biz does not provide any warranty regarding the copyright status or correctness of licensing terms. If you decide to reuse the images from Free-Photos.biz, you should verify the copyright status of each image just as you would when obtaining images from other sources.


The use of depictions of living or deceased persons may be restricted in some jurisdictions by laws regarding personality rights. Such images are exhibited at Free-Photos.biz as works of art that serve higher artistic interests.

PRIVACY POLICY


By registering your account and/or by subscribing to new and newly rated photographs you agree we may send you the links to photos and we may occasionally share other information with you.

We do NOT disclose your personal data.





christianity portal