-40%

Photograph of Motorcycle & Sidecar Speed Record LA to Bakersfield Ritchfield Oil

$ 50.16

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Condition: black/white glossy - Original
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    Vintage Underwood Photograph
    Record Speed from LA to Bakersfield
    PHOTO SIZE : 8x10
    Photo Type:  Underwood Company Photo
    Era: 1910-20
    Photographer: Unknown
    Location: LA, CA
    Finnish: Glossy
    Subject: Motorcycle
    Condition: Some Damage to the Surface.
    Paper Curling
    About me:
    I have sold about Million on eBay over the last 20
    years under Will1N4 with 99.9% positive feedback. I
    sell about anything under this account and sent 5
    children through college doing so. I am known for
    candor accurate listings and accepting returns if
    something falls short in some way.
    History in Photographs, (HIP) is a venture I just started
    and is dedicated to photographs that reach our criteria
    of telling a part of America's past. We sell both
    original prints and hand restored copies that are
    actually higher quality then the original given modern
    technology and using the original negative when
    possible. We spend between one and eight hours
    restoring a negative by hand and consider it a work
    of art. As such, all our restored photographs are unique
    to HIP and are owned under copyright so you will not find
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    Artist Autobiography
    "Willis M. Rue is a native of East Orange, New Jersey
    where most of his formative years were spent with pen,
    pad and brush. Will is a graduate of Yale School of Fine
    Arts at New Haven, Conn. and was fortunate to have
    studied
    and later worked with world
    famous mural artist Eugene
    Savage. During the pre-war years, Will slit his time between
    farming and art, loving the land and animals as well as painting.
    During WWII, Will worked for the U.S. government in the
    capacity of Art Director at Camp Evans and Fort Monmouth in
    New Jersey. After the war, Will opened his own art studio and
    s
    p
    ecialized in Industrial portraiture. During these years of 1948 to
    1959, Will traveled to the western states, where he fell in love with
    the scenic splendor of Arizona. In 1962, Will moved to Wickenburg
    Arizona, where he divides his time between art and Big Red, his
    trusted friend and companion."