You are here

Louis Adams, A.R. Pardington and Alexandre Darracq

Collection: This image is from the Hal B. Fullerton Photographs and is depicted in a glass plate negative, print and digital image.; Image is part of the Hal B. Fullerton Photographs
Date: 1904 Material: plate glass; gelatin silver print Dimension: 5 x 7 inches (glass plate negative); 7 x 5 inches (print); 400 ppi (digital image)
Creator: Hal B. Fullerton Identifier: aql:3543 hbf-004398 hbf-004398.tif

Description: Long Island Automobile Club officers laying out the course for the second 100-mile Endurance Test. In the vehicle were Louis Adams, first president of the Long Island Automobile Club, A.R. Pardington, one of seven charter members of the club (as was the photographer) and later a famous automobile referee and speedway manager, and [possibly] Alexandre Darracq.

Collection : aql:3185; vital:1

Creator : Hal B. Fullerton

Date : 1904

Summary/Description : Long Island Automobile Club officers laying out the course for the second 100-mile Endurance Test. In the vehicle were Louis Adams, first president of the Long Island Automobile Club, A.R. Pardington, one of seven charter members of the club (as was the photographer) and later a famous automobile referee and speedway manager, and [possibly] Alexandre Darracq.

Subject : Automobiles; Automobile racing; Long Island Automobile Club

Rights : Public domain

Coverage : Glen Cove, NY Glen Cove (N.Y.) Nassau County (N.Y.)

Type : glass plate negative, black and white print; digital image

Format : plate glass; gelatin silver print; 5 x 7 inches (glass plate negative); 7 x 5 inches (print); 400 ppi (digital image)

Identifier : aql:3543 hbf-004398 hbf-004398.tif

Related Items

Subject:
Automobiles; Automobile racing; Long Island Automobile Club
Rights Notice
Public domain


Add new comment

Filtered HTML

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <br>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.