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Wayne F. Miller Photography
About
Projects
Early Family
United States Navy
Shore Leave
Longchamp Racecourse
Chicago's South Side
The World is Young
The Family of Man
Personalities
Editorial Work
Publications
News
Store
Contact
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Shore Leave
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Print Store The evening campfire.
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The evening campfire.

$400.00

11x14 Lifetime archival ink jet print. Printed under the supervision of Wayne F. Miller, 2008.

The evening campfire is one of the parts of the day which the children enjoy the most. Each of these children will sing his part in “Ten Little Indians”. Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind. Napa, California. 1950.

Rose Resnick (1916-2006) experienced total blindness by the age of three from glaucoma. In 1947, after academic and musical successes, she cofounded the nonprofit Recreation for the Blind with Nina Brandt. In 1950 they opened Enchanted Hills, the first permanent camp for blind children in the country. Resnick served as the camp's executive director until 1958. Her organization then merged with the San Francisco Association for the Blind to form San Francisco Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired, which still runs the camp today.

Appears in Wayne F. Miller Photographs 1942-1958 published by powerHouse Books, 2008.

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11x14 Lifetime archival ink jet print. Printed under the supervision of Wayne F. Miller, 2008.

The evening campfire is one of the parts of the day which the children enjoy the most. Each of these children will sing his part in “Ten Little Indians”. Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind. Napa, California. 1950.

Rose Resnick (1916-2006) experienced total blindness by the age of three from glaucoma. In 1947, after academic and musical successes, she cofounded the nonprofit Recreation for the Blind with Nina Brandt. In 1950 they opened Enchanted Hills, the first permanent camp for blind children in the country. Resnick served as the camp's executive director until 1958. Her organization then merged with the San Francisco Association for the Blind to form San Francisco Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired, which still runs the camp today.

Appears in Wayne F. Miller Photographs 1942-1958 published by powerHouse Books, 2008.

11x14 Lifetime archival ink jet print. Printed under the supervision of Wayne F. Miller, 2008.

The evening campfire is one of the parts of the day which the children enjoy the most. Each of these children will sing his part in “Ten Little Indians”. Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind. Napa, California. 1950.

Rose Resnick (1916-2006) experienced total blindness by the age of three from glaucoma. In 1947, after academic and musical successes, she cofounded the nonprofit Recreation for the Blind with Nina Brandt. In 1950 they opened Enchanted Hills, the first permanent camp for blind children in the country. Resnick served as the camp's executive director until 1958. Her organization then merged with the San Francisco Association for the Blind to form San Francisco Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired, which still runs the camp today.

Appears in Wayne F. Miller Photographs 1942-1958 published by powerHouse Books, 2008.

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