Emmett M. Smith photograph album, 1914-1919
approximately 790 photographs and 6 pieces of ephemera in 1 album
The Emmett M. Smith photograph album contains approximately 790 photographs and 6 pieces of ephemera related to the experiences of American soldier and engineer Cpl. Emmett Merle Smith while he served with the United States Army Air Service’s 800th Aero Repair Squadron in France during World War I.
The album (28 x 37 cm) has black cloth covers with “Postal Souvenirs” stamped on the front; the covers and spine are in poor condition, as are a relatively small number photographs (some of which bear signs of insect damage).
On the inside of the front cover is a tipped-in copy of A History of the 800th Aero Repair Squadron, an official unit history account of the squadron published by its members in 1919. A small group of 10 loose photos and 6 pieces of ephemera are also present, including postcards, snapshots, YMCA guides to Paris and Marseilles, and two programs related to jointly held French and American Mother’s Day celebrations in Paris in May 1919 that were organized by L’Association des French Homes.
The first pasted-in photographs in the album are a series of 24 panoramic views showing Parisian scenery and famous landmarks. This section ends with another YMCA guide to Paris and a matriculation card for the Université de Paris Faculte des Sciences 1918-1919 for Emmett M. Smith that includes a portrait. Smith appears to likely have been the compiler of this album as he appears in numerous other photographs throughout. He was a member of the 800th Aero Repair Squadron’s Flight A, who were stationed at Camp de Souge near Bordeaux.
From pg. 15 through to the end of the album photographs are individually numbered from 1 to 781. While a typescript index describes photographs #25-28, there is no overarching index for the entire series. Numerous photos have captions (including manuscript captions), though the majority do not. Images come in a range of sizes and appear to have originated from numerous sources including German and French photographers as well as snapshots possibly taken by Smith himself. “AR” also appears on several photographs, possibly indicating that these images were taken by 800th Aero Repair Squadron photographers. However, by and large photographers are not identified for specific images.
In general, this album contains frontline scenes of battlefields, dead soldiers and animals, trench views, and ruined structures as well as images documenting camp life, military bases, and aerial reconnaissance views. Numerous photographs of military equipment, weaponry, airplanes, tanks, warships, soldiers, and street scenes showing cities/towns and civilians are also present. Post-war scenes include documented stays in Paris, southern France, Italy, and Spain.
- #3 (image showing charging soldiers, some in gas masks, with one man appearing to be clutch his throat while falling; captioned “Actual photo of action at Verdune”)
- #7, 651 (800th Aero Repair Squadron group portraits)
- #12 (shot of Kaiser Wilhelm talking with German officers)
- #15, 17 (aerial views of Albert, France, in November 1916)
- #48, 70.1 (pictures of German tanks)
- #73, 76 (view of citadel with German signage and view showing street signage by ruins; amongst other views that appear to be in Belgium)
- #109 ("Toul - French plane ready for a flight")
- #110, 111 (images showing the French and American sections of the 1918 panoramic painting Panthéon de la Guerre)
- #142, 143 (two images of a train wreck by “Chiljian,” possibly Armenian American photographer Pvt. Henry B. Chiljian)
- #146, 148 (two images showing plane crash wreckage)
- #167 (French observation balloon being inflated)
- #209 (Georges Clemenceau visiting aviation field)
- #219 (clipping showing aftermath of the Halifax explosion with inscription reading “Spent 10 day aboard ship here right after explosion was supposed to have been here just before explosion but was delayed”)
- #374 (post-war image captioned “U.S.A. bound” which precedes series of naval voyage images)
- #451+ (images from Italy and Southern France)
- #525 (railroad scene with “Chicago Opera Association” sign in view)
- #631 (view of three men at typewriters working in an office with maps and aerial photographs pinned to the wall)
- #638 (aerial view captioned “My aviation camp. Camp de Souge - North of Bordeaux from the 2nd Artillery Aerial Observation Island 1917-1918-1919”)
- #649 (view showing surgery being performed on a man in operating room captioned “Hell - without [anesthesia]”)
- #699 (view showing a queue outside of a YMCA in Bangor, Maine)
- #712, 715 (two portraits of young women captioned “My Italian fiancée” and “My Spanish fiancée”)