
Bert Welte was born October 19th, 1898. He died November 10th, 1955 and is buried in the Quincy National Cemetery.

Bert Welte was born October 19th, 1898. He died November 10th, 1955 and is buried in the Quincy National Cemetery.
Two soldiers and a sailor at Wadham's Studio in Wildwood, New Jersey. The sailor is an Electrician's Mate. The soldier on the left is a member of the Medical Corps.

A view of a German supply rail from December 1915. In front of the derailed car there are rolls of barbed wire. To the left is a two-man saw.
A telephone field station. A model 1905 telephone handset can be seen hanging just below the sign "F. St. 22b".

Wilhelm Ruhlman of the Reserve Infantry Battalion 15 in Cologne in 1914 just after the start of the war.

A German anti-aircraft unit set up in the woods. In the center is a Goertz rangefinder. My guess is that the device on the right of the rangefinder is a tachymeter use to determine deflection. At the far right is the telephone that would receive information from a forward spotter.
Nothing to indicate where this photo was taken except for the pineapple. Perhaps this rifle range is in the Philippines or maybe Hawaii.
A post war portrait of a soldier in Gand, Belgium. Wartime Belgian uniforms were supplied by the British while the helmet was from France.
Whiz-Bangs was name given to German light artillery shells or in the case a group of musical clowns from New Zealand. This photograph was taken by H. J. Rouse in Christchurch.
Here is a member of the Aplini, specialized mountain troops. He still has the eagle feather in his hat so this photo was either taken before 1915 or he was far from the front at the time. 62 Alpini battalions were raised during World War One.