Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Robert Enrique Muller" in English language version.
Perhaps Mr. Muller's most remarkable picture is that of the United States battle-ship Michigan taken head on while the battle-ship was steaming at twenty-two miles an hour. Mr. Muller maintains that photographing a speeding battle-ship head on is fully as dangerous as taking a snapshot at a charging rhinoceros.
Enrique Muller and Robert E. Muller were one of the foremost US naval photographers at the turn of the 20th Century. They photographed warships from the Spanish–American War to WWI. Their photographs are found on many different publisher postcards as well as their own. This was a family business. The father probably started out as an official US naval photographer in the late 1890s ...
Enrique Muller, a Brooklyn photographer, is in this city making arrangements with the German embassy for a set of photographs of the launching of the Meteor for the German government. Mr. Muller is the proud possessor of a pair of gold cuff buttons, bearing the royal coat-of-arms of Germany, and the well known W of the Kaiser. 'These were sent to me as a present by Emperor William,' said Mr. Muller to-day, 'in acknowledgment of some special work that I did for him in connection with the yacht races here last year. The Kaiser is a great admirer of good photography and as everybody knows is a keen yachtsman. I had some very good photos of the Shamrock II and the Columbia in racing rigs and made up a set of them and sent them, with my compliments, to the Emperor. He surprised me by making me a present of these cuff buttons. My father, was a German subject and for twenty-five years was employed in the post office at Kiel. In recognition of his long service the present Emperor's father gave to him a silver medal.'
Robert Enrique Muller was duly adjudicated bankrupt on December 23, 1915 ...
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