Image bank
| Photographer | Onbekend |
| Credits | Nationaal Archief/Spaarnestad Photo/Anefo/Fotograaf onbekend |
| Caption | Information not available |
| Photographer | Fotograaf onbekend |
| Credits | Nationaal Archief/Spaarnestad Photo/Het Leven/Fotograaf onbekend |
| Caption | Living conditions in The Netherlands. Basement flat in the Nieuwe Spiegelstraat in Amsterdam (the Netherlands), 1914. In this back room lives a family, by the name of Rol, of eight: a husband, his wife and six children and it is the only room available for this family. The mother with her children are posing near the basement window around the table with the oil lamp burning above it. The tiny basment window lets in only a little bit of daylight. To the right a cooker. The photo is taken for the article 'The Queen visiting the poor', in the Dutch magazine 'Het Leven'. On the left the cupboard beds which suffer from rising damp. Mrs Roll said that she only dared to let the queen have a quick look inside the beds because she didn't want her to see the moist bedding caused by the damp walls. The rent is one guilder and fifty cents a week. Mr Roll told the queen that it is very difficult to find a decent house for that price in Amsterdam. The man is the only breadwinner and as a demolisher he earns an irregular income. During the past ten weeks he only made 35 guilders. |
| Photographer | Fotograaf onbekend |
| Credits | Nationaal Archief/Spaarnestad Photo/Het Leven/Fotograaf onbekend |
| Caption | Sod hut in Drenthe (the Netherlands), with two women and a child in the entrance. 1936. |
| Photographer | Fotograaf onbekend |
| Credits | Nationaal Archief/Spaarnestad Photo/Het Leven/Fotograaf onbekend |
| Caption | Front of a slum dwelling in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 1928. |
| Photographer | Fotograaf onbekend |
| Credits | Nationaal Archief/Spaarnestad Photo/Het Leven/Fotograaf onbekend |
| Caption | Doorway of "de Hoeksteen" a slum dwelling that housed 25 one-room appartments in which families with up to 10 children used to live. The building was torn down in 1926 Oude Looiersstraat, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. |
| Photographer | Fotograaf onbekend |
| Credits | Nationaal Archief/Spaarnestad Photo/Fotograaf onbekend |
| Caption | Information not available |
| Photographer | Fotograaf onbekend |
| Credits | Nationaal Archief/Spaarnestad Photo/Het Leven/Fotograaf onbekend |
| Caption | Turf hut in the province of Drente, The Netherlands, 1936. |
| Photographer | Fotograaf onbekend |
| Credits | Nationaal Archief/Spaarnestad Photo/Het Leven/Fotograaf onbekend |
| Caption | Rented house in the Jewish quarter in Amsterdam (the Netherlands), 1916. The house is let out by the city of Amsterdam for one guilder per week. A man and children are posing around the table with a pan, kettle and some crockery on it. Above the table a gas lamp. 'Unfortunately the stale and utterly foul and disgusting smell that filled the entire room does not manifest itself on the photo'. |
| Photographer | Fotograaf onbekend |
| Credits | Nationaal Archief/Spaarnestad Photo/Het Leven/Fotograaf onbekend |
| Caption | Family that is forced to live in a leaky shed after having been evicted from their home. 1936. |
| Photographer | Fotograaf onbekend |
| Credits | Nationaal Archief/Spaarnestad Photo/Het Leven/Fotograaf onbekend |
| Caption | Interior of a slum at 2 Kleeresloot in Amsterdam (the Netherlands), 1928. A woman and children in shabby situation in their house. In the corner a bed, screened off underneath by a washboard and a tray among other things. Next to the bed a washtub and clothes and laundry hanging from lines above the bed. To the wall, in a frame, the saying: 'The Lord is my Shepherd'. |
| Searched for '41 / SOCIALE TOESTANDEN' 1126 results found, nr. 21 to 30 shown (page 3 of 113) If you didn't find what you were looking for, call (023-5185150) or e-mail us! |
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