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Edward Jackson (photographer) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Edward Jackson (photographer)
Edward Norman Jackson (June 28, 1885 – November 11, 1967) was an American photographer and photojournalist for the ''New York Daily News.'' Jackson was President Woodrow Wilson’s European photographer during the close of World War I and photographed ''The Big Four'' world leaders at the Paris Peace Conference. ==Early life== The youngest of four siblings of an Irish immigrant family, Jackson was born in Philadelphia on June 28, 1885. His impoverished family would often go to the local soup house to obtain a ticket for a loaf of bread and another ticket for a can of bean soup, his personal journal states. Jackson sold newspapers (''Philadelphia Bulletin'') on street corners to help his family, where he met a studio photographer who offered him a job after school and Saturdays. He was paid $1.50 a week. The studio specialized in tintype portraitures in 1901. In 1903 the studio moved to Atlantic City and Jackson went with them. Jackson moved to New York City and worked for the American Press Association in the photo engraving department in 1912 where he also became a freelance news photographer.
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