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Locality: Waynesville, Missouri

Phone: +1 573-528-1292



Address: 107 B Historic 66 East 65583 Waynesville, MO, US

Website: www.picsbyjax.com/

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Pics by Jax LLC 13.12.2020

What excites you most about your Christmas Day!

Pics by Jax LLC 09.12.2020

Wreaths Across America 2020 (entire album)

Pics by Jax LLC 24.11.2020

Due to the State of Missouri Public Health Warning, this year’s Wreaths Across America ceremony will be conducted privately and wreaths will be placed by cemete...ry personnel. While this is disappointing for all of us, honoring our Veterans while protecting the health and safety of our community and staff is our top priority. We appreciate your support and understanding while we all try to navigate these difficult times. We wish everyone a safe and happy holiday season and look forward to seeing everyone soon! The cemetery staff will place the wreaths. There will be a small private ceremony on the 19th which will be streamed live by Fort Leonard Wood. Individuals can visit the cemetery at any time.

Pics by Jax LLC 21.11.2020

Wreaths Across America Ceremony 2020 at Missouri Veterans Cemetery - Fort Leonard Wood

Pics by Jax LLC 03.11.2020

Margaret Bourke-White, one of the pre-eminent photographers of the 20th century, is pictured here atop New York City's Chrysler Building in 1930. A staff photog...rapher for Life magazine since its founding in 1936, one of her photos was featured on the cover of the very first issue of the famous news magazine. For decades, Bourke-White traveled the world photographing key events of her time. Early in her career, she took dramatic pictures of architecture and inside steel mills and factories, pioneering a new style of magnesium flare that allowed her to capture incredible details and earned her national renown. In 1930, she became the first Western photographer allowed to take pictures of Soviet industry during the Soviet five-year plan. Like her contemporary Dorothea Lange, she spent much of the 1930s photographing the downtrodden victims of America's Great Depression. When World War II broke out, Bourke-White was the first woman permitted to work in combat zones. She was the only foreign photographer in Moscow when German forces invaded and she captured the bombardment of the Kremlin in a series of dramatic photos. LIFE staff started referring to her as Maggie the Indestructible after repeatedly coming under fire and surviving being on a torpedoed ship in the Mediterranean, stranded on an Arctic island, and getting pulled out of Chesapeake Bay after a helicopter crash. While attached to General Patton's forces in Germany, she was one of the first photographers to document the horrors of the Buchenwald concentration camp after it was liberated. The following year, she photographed Mahatma Gandhi in India, including taking a now iconic photo of him at his spinning wheel. She is considered "one of the most effective chroniclers" of the violence that erupted during the partition of India and Pakistan. Bourke-White had a reputation for being relentless in her pursuit of the perfect photograph to embody her subject. "I feel that utter truth is essential," she asserted, "and to get that truth may take a lot of searching and long hours." For a historical fiction novel about Margaret Bourke-White, check out Girl with a Camera: Margaret Bourke-White, Photographer for ages 12 and up at https://www.amightygirl.com/girl-with-a-camera She is also one of the women featured in Reporting Under Fire: 16 Daring Women War Correspondents and Photojournalists for ages 12 and up: https://www.amightygirl.com/reporting-under-fire For two children's books about another famous female photographer, Dorothea Lange, we recommend "Dorothea's Eyes: Dorothea Lange Photographs the Truth," for ages 6 to 10 (https://www.amightygirl.com/dorothea-s-eyes) and "Dorothea Lange" for ages 5 to 8 (https://www.amightygirl.com/dorothea-lange-faces-of-depress) To introduce children and teens to more trailblazing women like Margaret Bourke-White, visit our "Role Models" biography section at http://amgrl.co/2wRJudE Credit: This photo of Margaret Bourke-White was taken by her dark room assistant Oscar Graubner.