This INCREDIBLE picture was taken in 1918.
It is 18,000 men preparing for war in a training camp at Camp Dodge in Iowa . EIGHTEEN THOUSAND MEN!!!!!
What a priceless gift from our grandfathers...
(http://i273.photobucket.com/albums/jj216/marshalette/StatueofLib.jpg)
Pretty awesome!
Thanks for sharing this, what a neat idea.
What pride they must have felt! Thanks for sharing it with us.
I wonder who had to figure out how many men to have stand in the certain areas to make the figure of the statue?
That would have been a challenge.
It would have been easy for a computer, but no computers. Probably with math, just like all the sciences.
At first, I took issue with the picture saying 18,000 men.
There are 17 men in the first four rows, or so.
At that rate it would take 1,058 rows to use up 18,000 men. There does not look like that many rows, but
maybe perspective played a role in some of those far off rows.
Then I wondered how they could get 18,000 men to march to the template--They surely had to march to maintain discipline,
file off from each platoon and find a mark--each man surely was on a mark,
and stand for the photo--without at least several hundred having to go to the bathroom, er, latrine.
My thoughts exactly! But a nifty photo none the less.
The video site shown below is awesome. You won't regret taking a few minutes out of your day to view it and perhaps even send it on. It takes a few moments to load so be patient -
You may have heard the song before but this video is new. In the beginning, he goes into a pawn shop to pawn a flag... The pawnbroker is in his sixties, and over his shoulder you see a photo of a young Vietnam era warrant officer with aviator wings and the MOH.
Yes, that's really a Medal of honor winner--not an actor.
http://www.whatkindofworlddoyouwant.com/videos/view/id/706270
Teresa, that was so good! Thanks for sharing it. "Freedom isn't free!"
Awesome video