Courtney Charles Allen PRICE CHARTS
1896 Norfolk, Virginia - 1969. Known for: Magazine story illustration, camouflage art.
Courtney Allen (1896-1969). There are additional aspects of Courtney (Charles) Allen’s career that are interesting but not generally known. When the US entered World War I in 1917, he was working as... Read full biography
Courtney Allen (1896-1969). There are additional aspects of Courtney (Charles) Allen’s career that are interesting but not generally known. When the US entered World War I in 1917, he was working as an artist for the Wilmington Star and the Washington Times. He joined the US Army and served in... Read full biography
Courtney Allen (1896-1969). There are additional aspects of Courtney (Charles) Allen’s career that are interesting but not generally known. When the US entered World War I in 1917, he was working as an artist for the Wilmington Star and the Washington Times. He joined the US Army and served in France as a camouflage artist. A front-page article in the Washington Times in 1919 states that 37 officers and 445 camouflage artists have returned to Washington barracks after ten months of overseas... Read full biography
Courtney Allen (1896-1969). There are additional aspects of Courtney (Charles) Allen’s career that are interesting but not generally known. When the US entered World War I in 1917, he was working as an artist for the Wilmington Star and the Washington Times. He joined the US Army and served in France as a camouflage artist. A front-page article in the Washington Times in 1919 states that 37 officers and 445 camouflage artists have returned to Washington barracks after ten months of overseas service. The article states that among the returning camoufleurs was Sergeant Courtney C. Allen, “former artist for The Times,” as well as five other artists from Washington DC, including Captain E.R. Keane, Private David Rubin, Private James Allen,... Read full biography
Courtney Allen (1896-1969). There are additional aspects of Courtney (Charles) Allen’s career that are interesting but not generally known. When the US entered World War I in 1917, he was working as an artist for the Wilmington Star and the Washington Times. He joined the US Army and served in France as a camouflage artist. A front-page article in the Washington Times in 1919 states that 37 officers and 445 camouflage artists have returned to Washington barracks after ten months of overseas service. The article states that among the returning camoufleurs was Sergeant Courtney C. Allen, “former artist for The Times,” as well as five other artists from Washington DC, including Captain E.R. Keane, Private David Rubin, Private James Allen, Private George Park, and Private James O’Shea. Four of the five were pictured in a group photograph in the same... Read full biography
Courtney Charles Allen - Charts
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