In 1936, a recent college graduate set out from the United States for a whirlwind trip to Europe, including a stop at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. An amateur photographer, Albert Carl Michaelis, Jr. could not have known at the time how significant and telling his photographs of these historic games would be.
Felicia Williamson, Director of Library and Archives, and Robynn Amaba, Assistant Archivist at the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museuem, will present an exclusive look at Michaelis’ photographs and negatives housed in the Museum’s collection.
In 1936, a recent college graduate set out from the United States for a whirlwind trip to Europe, including a stop at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. An amateur photographer, Albert Carl Michaelis, Jr. could not have known at the time how significant and telling his photographs of these historic games would be.
Felicia Williamson, Director of Library and Archives, and Robynn Amaba, Assistant Archivist at the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museuem, will present an exclusive look at Michaelis’ photographs and negatives housed in the Museum’s collection.
In 1936, a recent college graduate set out from the United States for a whirlwind trip to Europe, including a stop at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. An amateur photographer, Albert Carl Michaelis, Jr. could not have known at the time how significant and telling his photographs of these historic games would be.
Felicia Williamson, Director of Library and Archives, and Robynn Amaba, Assistant Archivist at the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museuem, will present an exclusive look at Michaelis’ photographs and negatives housed in the Museum’s collection.