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ContributorsSmedley, Agnes, 1892-1950 (Photographer)
Description8"x 10" matte finished photograph of young girl and young boy - not identified.
ContributorsSmedley, Agnes, 1892-1950 (Photographer)
DescriptionPhotograph of Headquarters of Chinese New Fourth Army Showing some of the captured Japanese war trophies. (See Volume 35 - Group XII - 80 for some of the trophies Agnes Smedley was given by the Chinese)
ContributorsSmedley, Agnes, 1892-1950 (Photographer)
DescriptionPhotograph of Dr. Skinsness, of Kioshan, Honan (Henan), China
ContributorsSmedley, Agnes, 1892-1950 (Photographer)
Created1940-11-01
DescriptionPhotograph of Li Ming (small Chinese boy)
ContributorsSmedley, Agnes, 1892-1950 (Photographer)
DescriptionPhotograph of British sailors from seven torpedo boats. They escaped from Hong Kong after the Colony fell to Japanese. Here is a group in Chinese guerrilla uniforms with British helmets. They were taken through the Japanese lines by Chinese guerrillas.
ContributorsSmedley, Agnes, 1892-1950 (Photographer)
DescriptionPhotograph of David M. MacDougall of the British Ministry of Information - escaped from Hong Kong with over 70 British and Chinese citizens. He was wounded. Chinese reporters interviewed him in Waichow (Huizhou).
ContributorsSmedley, Agnes, 1892-1950 (Author)
DescriptionShorthand notes concerning J. B. Powell - 1 page.
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ContributorsSmedley, Agnes, 1892-1950 (Author)
Created1937 to 1940
Description(Top photo) The stretcher bearers halted at villages to give the wounded water.(Bottom photo) Civilian stretcher bearers on the Central China front.
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ContributorsSmedley, Agnes, 1892-1950 (Author)
Created1937 to 1940
Description
Chinese armies and railway men tore up their railway to prevent the Japanese from using them. Then the railway men carried away the steel rails and girders and welded them into big swords for soldiers and guerrillas to fight the enemy. This is a Chinese railway worker, member of a

Chinese armies and railway men tore up their railway to prevent the Japanese from using them. Then the railway men carried away the steel rails and girders and welded them into big swords for soldiers and guerrillas to fight the enemy. This is a Chinese railway worker, member of a group of 60 railway workers who banded together to form a cooperative. They use blacksmith forges and bellows to melt and weld the steel rails. then hammer them into swords for use against the enemy.
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ContributorsSmedley, Agnes, 1892-1950 (Author)
Created1937 to 1940
Description(Top photo and Bottom photo) Railway Workers on the old Peking-Hankow (Beijing-Hankou) Railway tore up the rails and founded a small foundry in Chumatien (Zhumadian), Honan (Henan) where they turned rails into big swords for the armed forces. (2 views)