Description: WE-6 - Water and Mud-Soaked Trenches. This water-soaked trench is typical of the living quarters of the soldiers in Flanders. For days, weeks and even months soldiers have endured quarters soaked with water like this trench. With wet clothes, wet blankes and wet straw to lie on, one can imagine the hardships that were suffered. The mud in many cases would allow the leg to sink in over boot tops, and with continuous rainfall the conditions were kept like this for days and months. Many of the trenches had to be floored with boards (when they were available) to make a place to stand without sinking. It was impossible to keep the walls of these trenches from falling in. (From Great War in 3D Online) Fisher Scientific Materials Company of Pittsburgh, PA, founded by 20-year old Chester G. Fisher in 1902, sold laboratory supplies to the Army during World War I. Fisher was tasked to equip a research laboratory to identify German gas weapons. The company exists today as Fisher Scientific. In the early Twenties, the company produced a set of 72 medium-format glass stereographs. All images were authorized by the French War Department and were obtained from French manufacturers Paris Stéréo and STL. The plates have a characteristic layout of a black center bar with logo and sequence number and a black bottom bar with the title. Fisherview images are not in the standard French medium format, which is a glass plate 59-60mm x 129-130mm with a 6mm title bar at center. The Fisherview plate is 62-63mm x 126-127mm. The 6mm center strip was used for the company logo and a 12mm strip was created at the bottom for the number and title. The viewing area of a Fisherview plate is 6050mm2, or about 81% of the area of a standard French medium format view (7440mm2). Production of photographic equipment was out of character for Fisher. The company does not have archives today that explain the reason for it. A possible explanation may be that Chester Fisher’s artistic bent led him to acquire rights to a batch of Great War stereo images when given the opportunity during his war work. He became a prominent art collector specializing in paintings related to alchemy and chemistry, building an extensive collection eventually donated to the Chemical Heritage Foundation in Philadelphia. Fisherview plates were sold in boxes of 12 plates for the "Fisherview," a crude stereoviewer of two wooden boxes with the lenses in one and the image holder in the other; the inner box slides in-and-out to get the correct focus. The World War set was accompanied by a Catalog of Plates describing each view in much the same manner as the text on the reverse of Keystone stereoviews. The catalog mentions additional sets, all related to the war. They include the London Peace March, the return of American troops to New York, and the bombardment of Rheims.
Price: 14.95 USD
Location: Elyria, Ohio
End Time: 2025-01-31T03:35:01.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Antique: Yes
Image Color: Black & White
Title: WF-6 Water And Mud-soaked Trenches
Material: Glass
Brand/Publisher: Fisherview Scientific Materials Company
Subject: France, Germany, Military, Europe, World War One, WWI, The Great War, Trench Warfare, Soldiers, Doughboy, Trenches
Vintage: Yes
Type: Stereoview & Stereoscope
Year of Production: 1920
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Theme: Cities & Towns, Conflicts & Wars, Continents & Countries
Features: 1st Edition
Time Period Manufactured: 1900-1924
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States