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  Stepping out of time The beginnings of Shaker applesauce  

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Stepping out of time The beginnings of Shaker applesauce
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The Library Congress The beginnings of Shaker apple sauce I claim no rights other than colorizing this image if you wish to use let me know and always give due credit to The Library of Congress I have no commercial gain in publishing this image Title The beginnings of Shaker apple sauce Summary Photograph shows an elderly woman, three-quarter length portrait, facing slightly left, seated in a chair, with a large wooden bowl of apples on her lap. Contributor Names Tarbell, John H., photographer Created / Published c1907 Nov. 29. Subject Headings - Shakers--People--1900-1910 - Older people--1900-1910 - Apples--1900-1910 - Women--Domestic life--1900-1910 Format Headings Photographic prints--1900-1910. Portrait photographs--1900-1910. Notes - H103125 U.S. Copyright Office. - Title from item. - Copyright 1907 by John H. Tarbell. Medium 1 photographic print. Call Number/Physical Location LOT 11827 [item] [P&P] Repository Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA Digital Id cph 3c33127 //hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3c33127 Library of Congress Control Number 2003675481 Reproduction Number LC-USZ62-133127 (b&w film copy neg.) Rights Advisory Rights status not evaluated. For general information see "Copyright and Other Restrictions..." (lcweb.loc.gov/rr/print/195_copr.html) Online Format image Description 1 photographic print. | Photograph shows an elderly woman, three-quarter length portrait, facing slightly left, seated in a chair, with a large wooden bowl of apples on her lap. LCCN Permalink lccn.loc.gov/2003675481 Additional Metadata Formats MARCXML Record MODS Record Dublin Core Record Rights Advisory Library of Congress No known restrictions: works published or registered in the U.S. before 1923 are now in the public domain. Explanation: According to the Copyright Act of 1976, works registered for copyright or published with a copyright notice were protected for a maximum of 75 years of copyright protection, assuming the copyrights on the works were renewed (28 years first term plus 47 for the second, if renewed). Public Law 105-298 enacted in October 1998 increased the maximum to 95 years [28 years first term and 67 for the second, if renewed]. Before 1998 the longest amount of time a work could be protected was 75 years, so works before 1923 were no longer protected (1998 minus 75 years equals 1923). When the law changed, the 1923 date was �frozen� and will remain so until 2018 [2018 minus 95 equals 1923]. Starting in 2018 the date that works are no longer protected will again change yearly, being calculated as the current year minus 95 years.

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