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Kentuckiana Digital Library
  • Angermeier, Frankfort. (Leo Thomas Angermeier (1889-1919). Born in Louisville, Kentucky. Black-and-white portrait of Leo Angermeier with the Frankfort Statesmen (Kentucky). He holds a mitt in his left hand and has an emblem on the front left of his uniform. Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Badger, Lexington. (Guy Badger (b. 1874). Black-and-white portrait of Guy Badger with the Lexington Colts (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Baker Phila. Amer. (Color portrait of Frank Baker (John Franklin Baker) framed by two baseball bats. An elephant is in the top left corner. 'Athletics' is in the top right corner. Baker earned the nickname Home Run Baker in the 1911 World Series with the Philadelphia Athletics. Verso: Frank Baker. Frank Baker, the tall and hard-hitting third baseman of the champion Athletics, is a native of Maryland. After playing with semi-professional teams he had a short trial with the Baltimores, and in 1907 and in 1908 covered third for the Reading Club of the Tri-state League. His work with the latter was so brilliant that Connie Mack got his services. With the Athletics he has not fallen down in batting, like so many young players when they get into the major leagues. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Balenti, Savannah (Mike (Michael Richard) Balenti (1886-1955). Black-and-white portrait of Mike Balenti with the Savannah Indians (Georgia). Verso: Series No. 1. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Barney, Winchester (Michael Barney. Black-and-white portrait of Michael Barney with the Winchester Hustlers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Barry Phila. Amer. (Jack Barry (1887-1961). Color portrait of John J. Barry with the Philadelphia Athletics. An elephant is in the top left corner. 'Athletics' is in the top right corner. Verso: John J. Barry. John J. Barry, the fast young shortstop of the Philadelphia Athletics, is a native of Meriden, Connecticut. Barry had been doing fine work in the infield of the Holy Cross College team, and in the fall of 1907 Connie Mack went to Meriden himself and secured his services. In 1908 he sat on the Athletics' bench most of the season, but once he got a chance to play at short regularly he and Collins soon made their part of the diamond invulnerable. Their fast work in 1909 and 1910 indicates a long and brilliant future for these two young players. Includes statistics for 1909-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • John W. Bates of the Philadelphia Nationals (John William Bates (1882-1949). Color portrait of John W. Bates framed by two baseball bats. A 'P' is in the top left corner and 'Phillies' is in the top right corner. Known as Johnny Bates or Joe Bates. The team is the Philadelphia Athletics. Verso: John W. Bates. John W. Bates, popularly known as 'Joe,' outfielder for the Philadelphia Nationals, made his baseball debut with the team of his home town, Steubenville, Ohio, in 1905. His reputation as a long distance hitter brought him into the National League fold under the direction of the Bostons. In the middle of the season of 1909 he was traded to Philadelphia. He has become one of the best batters in the league, having cracked out 152 hits in 1910, good for a total of 209 bases. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Fred Beck of the Boston Nationals. (Frederick Thomas Beck (1886-1962). Color portrait of Fred Beck framed by two baseball bats. A 'B' is in the top left corner and 'Rustlers' is in the top right corner. The team is the Boston Rustlers (1911), formerly the Boston Doves. Verso: Frederick T. Beck. Fred Beck, the hard hitting outfielder, was sold to the Cincinnati Reds by the Boston Nationals in February, 1911. Beck started as a pitcher with the Bloomington Club of the Three I League, but being tried in the outfield was such a success that he was kept there. In 1908 he put in part of a season with the San Francisco team, and was then drafted by Boston. In 1910 he did some very heavy batting for that team, including 32 doubles, 9 triples and 10 home runs in his 157 hits. Includes statistics for 1909-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bemis, c. Cleveland Amer. (Harry Parker Bemis (1874-1947). Color portrait of Harry Bemis holding a bat and wearing a cap with a 'C' on it. The team is the Cleveland Broncos or Naps. Verso: Base Ball Gum. This card is one of a set of 50 Base Ball Players. Prominent members of national and American leagues, one of which is wrapped with every package of base ball gum. Manufactured only by John H. Dockman & Sons.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bender, Phila. Amer. (Charles Albert Bender (1884-1954) also known as Chief Bender. Color portrait of Chief Bender with the Philadelphia Athletics. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bender, Phila. Amer. (Charles Albert Bender (1884-1954) also known as Chief Bender. Color portrait of Chief Bender with the Philadelphia Athletics. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Chas. Bender, Phila. Am. (Charles Albert Bender (1884-1954) also known as Chief Bender. Color portrait of Charles Bender with the Philadelphia Athletics. An elephant is in the top left corner and 'Athletics' is in the top right corner. Verso: Charles A. Bender. Charles Albert Bender, the famous Indian pitcher of the Philadelphia Athletics, learned base ball at Carlisle. In 1903 he was signed by the Athletics. His pitching for them has steadily improved, and in 1910 he led the twirlers of the American League. In the 250 innings he worked he allowed 182 hits and 83 home runs, and struck out 155 men. He contributed timely hits in some of his games, batting .269 for the season. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont the Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2nd Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bergen, c. Brooklyn Nat'l. (Bill Bergen. Color portrait of Bill Bergen in a catcher's uniform. The team is the Brooklyn Superbas. Verso: Base Ball Gum. This card is one of a set of 50 Base Ball Players. Prominent members of national and American leagues, one of which is wrapped with every package of base ball gum. Manufactured only by John H. Dockman & Sons.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bresnahan, mgr. St. Louis. (Roger Bresnahan (1879-1944) also known as The Duke of Tralee. Color picture of Roger Bresnahan in an action shot. Manager, St. Louis Cardinals. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Brown, Chicago Nat'l. (Mordecai Brown (1876-1948) also known as Three Finger Brown. Color portrait of Mordecai Brown in a uniform with a 'C' on it. The team is the Chicago Cubs. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Callahan, Winchester. (Wesley Callahan (1888-1953). Black-and-white portrait of Wesley Callahan with the Winchester Hustlers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • H. Camnitz of the Pittsburgh Pirates. (Howie Camnitz (1881-1960) also known as Red. Born in Covington, Kentucky; died in Louisville, Kentucky. Color portrait of Howard Camnitz. A pirate is in the top left corner and 'Pirates' is in the top right. The team is the Pittsburgh Pirates. Verso: Howard Camnitz. Howard Camnitz, one of Pittsburg's star twirlers, first played ball in the Cotton States League, 1902. In 1904 he signed with Pittsburg, but spent 1905 and 1906 getting valuable seasoning with the Toledo Club of the American Association. In 1907, his first full season with the Pirates, he won 13 games out of 21, and in 1908, 16 out of 25. In 1909, when Pittsburg won the National League pennant, he contributed 25 victories out of 31 games. In percentage, .806, he tied Mathewson for the leadership of the National League pitchers. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Camnitz, p. Pittsburg Nat'l. (Howie Camnitz (1881-1960) also known as Red. Born in Covington, Kentucky; died in Louisville, Kentucky. Color portrait of Howard Camnitz with the Pittsburg Pirates or Pittsburgh Pirates. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Camnitz Pittsburgh. (Howie Camnitz (1881-1960) also known as Red. Born in Covington, Kentucky; died in Louisville, Kentucky. Black-and-white portrait of Howard Camnitz with the Pittsburgh Pirates on a round card. Verso: Stars of the Diamond. The Gum That's Round. One in every 5 ¢ package of Colgan's Violet Chips and Mint Chips. Beware of Imitations.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Chance, Chicago Nat'l. (Frank Chance or Frank LeRoy Chance (1876-1924) also known as Husk or the Peerless Leader. Color portrait of Frank Chance in an action shot. The team is the Chicago Orphans or Chicago Cubs. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Chase, N Y Amer. (Hal Chase or Harold Homer Chase (1883-1947) also known as Prince Hal. Color portrait of Chase in action shot. The team is the New York Highlanders. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Chase, Maysville. (Delbert Chase (b. 1889). Black-and-white portrait of Delbert Chase with the Maysville Rivermen (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Clarke, l.f. Pitts Nat'l. (Fred Clarke or Fred Clifford Clarke (1872-1960) also known as Cap. Color portrait of Fred Clarke with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Fred C. Clarke of the Pittsburg Nationals. (Fred Clarke or Fred Clifford Clarke (1872-1960) also known as Cap. Color portrait of Fred Clarke. A pirate is in the top left corner and 'Pirates' is in the top right corner. The team is the Pittsburgh Pirates. Verso: Fred Clarke. Under Fred Clarke as captain and manager, the Pittsburg team won the National Championship in 1901, 1902 and 1903, and in 1909 annexed both the National and World's Championships. Clarke's record as a player is also a fine one. Four times in the last ten years he led the left fielders, twice with the high mark of .987. August 23, 1910, he made four outfield assists in one game, a league record. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory no. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Clarke Pittsburg. (Fred Clarke or Fred Clifford Clarke (1872-1960) also known as Cap. Black-and-white portrait of Fred Clarke with the Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh) Pirates on a round card. Verso: Stars of the Diamond. The Gum That's Round. One in every 5 ¢ package of Colgan's Violet Chips and Mint Chips. Beware of Imitations.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Coleman, Winchester. (Ed Coleman. Black-and-white portrait of Ed Coleman with the Winchester Hustlers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Collins, 2b. Phila. Amer. (Bill Collins or William J. Collins (1863-1893). Color portrait of Bill Collins with the Philadelphia Athletics. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Collins, Columbia. (Collins, first name unknown. Black-and-white portrait of player Collins for the Columbia Tennessee team (1904). Verso: Series No. 1. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Collins, Phila. Amer. (Bill Collins or William J. Collins (1863-1893). Color portrait of Bill Collins with the Philadelphia Athletics. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Frank J. Corridon of the St. Louis Nationals. (Frank J. Corridon or Francis Joseph Corridon (1880-1941) also known as Fiddler. Color portrait of Frank Corridon. An 'STL' is in the top left corner and 'Cardinals' is in the top right. The team is the St. Louis Cardinals. Verso: Frank J. Corridon. Frank J. Corridon, whom George Stallings, the manager for Buffalo of the Eastern League, got from the St. Louis National in the winter of 1910-1911, was for several years one of the reliable regulars on the pitching staff of the Philadelphia Nationals. In the last three years he played with them he won 43 games out of 74, an average of victories which was several notches higher than that of the team as a whole. It is expected that his acquisition by the Buffalo Club will materially help them to improve their standing. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Corridon, p. Phila. Nat'l. (Frank J. Corridon or Francis Joseph Corridon (1880-1941) also known as Fiddler. Color portrait of Frank Corridon in an action shot. The team is the Philadelphia Athletics. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Otis Crandall of the New York Nationals. (Otis Crandall or James Otis Crandall (1887-1931) also known as Doc. Color portrait of Otis Crandall. An 'NY' is in the top left corner and 'Giants' is in the top right. The team is the New York Giants. Verso: Otis Crandall. Otis Crandall, the Giants' promising young pitcher, has steadily improved. Not only has his percentage of games won climbed nearly to the top of the list, but the figures for his fielding and batting are high. In 1910 he had only one fielding error in two hundred and eight innings, and at bat hit safely twenty-five times for thirty-eight bases, which gave him an average for the season of .342. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Creager, Richmond. (John Creager. Black-and-white portrait of John Creager with the Richmond Pioneers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • W.F. Dahlen of the Brooklyn Nationals. (Bill Dahlen or William Frederick Dahlen (1870-1950) also known as Bad Bill. Color portrait of Bill Dahlen. A 'B' is in the top left corner and 'Superbas' is in the top right. The team is the Brooklyn Superbas. Verso: William Dahlen.'Bill' Dahlen, manager of the Brooklyn Nationals, is qualified for the post by years of actual service. In 1880 and 1900 he played short for the Brooklyns when they won the National pennant. In 1904 he was traded to the Giants, and by his star performance that year and next helped them win the National and World's Championships. In 1908 he went to the Boston Nationals, and for a season played well, but in 1909 illness made him give up active playing and accept the position of Brooklyn's manager. If he does as well as a manager as he did as a player, he will get his team into the first division. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Dailey, Maysville. (Dailey, first name and dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of player Dailey with the Maysville Rivermen (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 'Harry' Davis, Phila. Amer (Harry Davis or Harry H. Davis (1873-1917) also known as Jasper. Color portrait of Harry Davis with the Philadelphia Athletics. Verso: This card is one of a set of Star Base Ball Players' Cards as follows. Includes list of players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Delehanty, Detroit Amer. (Jim Delahanty or James Christopher Delahanty (1879-1953). Verso: Base Ball Stars. Color portrait of Jim Delahanty holding a baseball bat. The team is the Detroit Tigers. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa. Includes list of players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Devlin, 3b New York Nat'l. (Art Devlin or Arthur McArthur Devlin (1879-1948). Color portrait of Art Devlin in a uniform with an 'NY' on the sleeve. The team is the New York Giants. Verso: Base Ball Gum. This card is one of a set of 50 Base Ball Players. Prominent members of national and American leagues, one of which is wrapped with every package of base ball gum. Manufactured only by John H. Dockman & Sons.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Donohue Chic. Amer. (Jiggs Donahue or John Augustus Donahue (1879-1913). Color portrait of Jiggs Donahue framed by two baseball bats. A white stocking is in the top left corner and 'White Sox' is in the top right. The team is the Chicago White Sox. Verso: J. Donohue. 'Jiggs' Donohue, who was engaged in 1911, to manage the Galveston team of the Texas League, and has been working hard to improve their standing, was one of the best first basemen in the county when he played with the Chicago White Sox. He joined them in 1904, and in 1906, 1907 and 1908 led all American League first-sackers in fielding. Accepting difficult chances was his specialty. In 1906 he was a most efficient cog in the machine that won the American League pennant and then beat the Cubs in the World's Series. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Donovan, Detroit Amer. (Bill Donovan or William Edward Donovan (1876-1923) also known as Wild Bill. Color portrait of Bill Donovan holding a baseball bat. A 'D' is on his uniform. The team is the Detroit Tigers. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one a of a set of 30 stars from original photographs. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa. Includes list of 30 players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Chas. S. Dooin of the Philadelphia Nationals. (Red Dooin or Charles Sebastian Dooin (1879-1952). Color portrait of Red Dooin. A 'P' is in the top left corner and 'Phillies' is in the top right. The team is the Philadelphia Phillies. Verso: Charles S. Dooin. Charles S. Dooin, the veteran catcher of the Philadelphia Nationals, has been their mainstay behind the bat for nearly nine years, and has won the approbation of all supporters of that team. In 1910 recognition for his hard work came in his appointment as manager. That he has been no shirker the record shows-- 521 assists and 1,543 put outs in 1908-09-10. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Dooin, Phila. Nat'l. (Red Dooin or Charles Sebastian Dooin (1879-1952). Color portrait of Red Dooin with the Philadelphia Phillies. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa. Includes list of 30 players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Michael J. Doolan of the Philadelphia Nationals. (Mickey Doolan or Michael Joseph Doolan (1880-1951) also known as Doc. Color portrait of Mickey Doolan. There is a 'P' in the top left corner and 'Phillies' in the top right. The team is the Philadelphia Phillies. Verso: Michael Doolan. Michael Doolan, shortstop for the Philadelphia Nationals, has to his credit in the records of 1908, 1909 and 1910 the imposing total of 904 put outs and 1403 assists. By his fielding average for 1910 he headed the shortstops in the National League. When he hits his specialty is two-baggers, of which he made thirty-one in 1910, and on August 5 of that year he hammered out three three-baggers in three times at bat. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Larry Doyle of the New York Nationals. (Larry Doyle or Lawrence Joseph Doyle (1886-1974) also known as Laughing Larry. Color portrait of Larry Doyle. A 'NY' is in the top left corner and 'Giants' is in the top right. The team is the New York Giants. Verso: Lawrence Doyle. 'Larry' Doyle, field captain and second baseman for the New York Nationals, first played with them in 1907, and succeeded that season in batting for .260. Since then he has been one of the Giants' hardest hitters, twice getting into the .300 class. In 1910 his 164 hits included 21 doubles, 14 triples and 8 home runs, making a total of 237 bases. Besides, in that year he waited for free transportation and got it 71 times, and stole 39 bases. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Dygert, p. Phila. Amer. (Jimmy Dygert or James Henry Dygert (1885-1936) also known as Sunny Jim. Color portrait of Jimmy Dygert with the Philadelphia Athletics. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Edington, Lexington (Frank Eddington. Black-and-white portrait of Frank Eddington with the Lexington Colts (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Elberfeld Wash. Amer. (Kid Elberfeld or Norman Arthur Elberfeld (1875-1944) also known as The Tabasco Kid. Color portrait of Kid Elberfeld framed by two baseball bats. The team is the Washington Senators. A 'W' is in the top left corner and 'Senators' is in the top right corner. Verso: Norman Elberfeld. 'Kid' Elberfeld, the active infielder of the Washington Americans, came to that team from the New York Highlanders in 1910. Elberfeld commenced playing semi-professional ball in his teens, and in 1897 joined the Detroit team. Since then he has played with Cincinnati, Philadelphia, and the New York Americans. Twice he got into .300 batting figures, in 1901 and 1906. He has always been fast in the field and a good batter when any of the bases were occupied. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory no. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Elgin, Richmond. (Jeff Elgin. Black-and-white portrait of Jeff Elgin with the Richmond Pioneers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ellis, Lexington. (Charles Ellis. Black-and-white portrait of Charles Ellis with the Lexington Colts (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Everden, Maysville. (Berney Everdon (1889-1974). Black-and-white portrait of Berney Everdon with the Maysville Rivermen (Kentucky.) Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Evers, Chicago Nat'l. (Johnny Evers or John Joseph Evers (1881-1947) also known as Crab and Trojan. Color portrait of Johnny Evers in an action shot. The team is the Chicago Orphans or Cubs. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa. Includes list of 30 players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Robert Ewing of the Philadelphia Nationals. (Bob Ewing or George Lemuel Ewing (1873-1947) also known as Long Bob. Color portrait of Bob Ewing. There is a 'P' in the top left corner and 'Phillies' in the top right. The team is the Philadelphia Phillies. Verso: Robert Ewing pitched in 1910 for the Philadelphia Nationals, and before that for the Cincinnatis, so he has not been fortunate in being with teams that were consistent winners, but his percentage of victories the last three years out of your has been greater than his club's. In the last three years, out of forty-four wins, ten were shut-outs. In 1910 he pitched one two-hit and three three-hit games. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Arthur Fletcher of the New York Nationals. (Art Fletcher or Arthur Fletcher (1885-1950). Color portrait of Art Fletcher. A 'NY' is in the top left corner and 'Giants' is in the top right. The team is the New York Giants. Verso: Arthur Fletcher. Arthur Fletcher, the Giants' active young substitute shortstop, came from the Dallas team of the Texas League. Owing to Bridwell's playing the position most of the time, he has not had much opportunity to get practice in actual games, but nevertheless has shown big league form. October 11, 1910, he made four hits in five times at bat, and in two games in the series with the Yankees accepted thirteen chances in faultless style. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory no. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Flick Cleveland. (Elmer Flick or Elmer Harrison Flick (1876-1971). Black-and-white portrait of Elmer Flick with the Cleveland Naps on a round card. Verso: Stars of the Diamond. The Gum That's Round. One in every 5 ¢ package of Colgan's Violet Chips and Mint Chips. Beware of Imitations.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Wm. N. Foxen of the Chicago Nationals. (Bill Foxen or William Aloysius Foxen (1879-1937). Color portrait of Bill Foxen. A cub is in the top left corner and 'Cubs' is in the top right. The team is the Chicago Cubs. Verso: William A. Foxen. Southpaw William A. Foxen, of the Chicago Nationals, started as a professional with New Bedford, of the New England League, in 1903. The next four years he spent with Hartford of the Connecticut League and Jersey City of the Eastern League. In 1908 he was secured by the Philadelphia Nationals, and in 1910 Manager Chance, who wished to strengthen his corps of lefthanders, made a good trade for the Cubs by taking him in exchange for Stack and Luderus. Manager Dooin considered him one of the best southpaws in the profession. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Gardner N.Y. Amer. (Earle Gardner or Earle McClurkin Gardner (1884-1943). Color portrait of Earle Gardner framed by two baseball bats. A 'NY' is in the top left corner and 'Yankees' is in the top right. Verso: Earl Gardner. Earl Gardner, second baseman of the New York Americans, first played in organized baseball in Springfield, Illinois, in 1905. In 1906 and 1907 he played with the Austin team of the Texas League, and had averages of .226 and .291 in batting and .976 and .946 in fielding. In 1908 with Hartford he batted .302 and fielded .970. In 1909, made too weak by long illness to work the full season with the Yankees, he played 56 games with Jersey City and batted .294. In 86 games with the New Yorks in 1910 he batted .244 and fielded .939. If he can recover the [p ] strength that his unfortunate illness of 1909 robbed him of, he is expected to equal some of his nine records in the minors. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Geo. Gibson of the Pittsburg Nationals. (George Gibson or George C. Gibson (1880-1967) also known as Moon. Color portrait of George Gibson. A pirate is in the top left corner and 'Pirates' is in the top right. The team is the Pittsburgh Pirates. Verso: George Gibson. George Gibson, the Pittsburg's reliable backstop, is the owner of a catcher's record that is unique in the history of the game. In 1909 he caught 150 games, of which 140 were consecutive, and his work was so good that his percentage led the league catchers for that year. In three years he has accepted 2426 chances, making 1895 put outs and 531 assists. June 21, 1910, he made four hits in five times at bat. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Gibson, Pittsburg Nat'l. (George Gibson or George C. Gibson (1880-1967) also known as Moon. Color portrait of George Gibson with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa. Includes list of 30 players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Gisler, Maysville. (Al Gisler or Albert H. Gisler (b. 1889). Black-and-white portrait of Al Gisler with the Maysville Rivermen (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Goostree, Winchester. (Eddie Goostree or Mallie Edward Goostree (1888-1963). Black-and-white portrait of Eddie Goostree with the Winchester Hustlers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Edward L. Grant of the Cincinnati Nationals. (Eddie Grant or Edward Leslie Grant (1883-1918) also known as Harvard Eddie. Color portrait of Eddie Grant. A 'C' is in the top left corner and 'Reds' is in the top right. The team is the Cincinnati Reds. Verso: Edward L. Grant. Edward L. Grant, the third baseman whom Cincinnati got from Philadelphia in trade during the winter of 1910-11, joined the Phillies in June, 1907. During 1906 he had covered third base for the Jersey City Eastern League team in good style, and what was more important had led the batters with .322. Manager Murray of Jersey City, when he was given the management of the Philadelphias, succeeded in taking Grant with him. In 1907 Grant was handicapped by injuries, but has since developed into one of the best third sackers in the National League. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d. Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Griffith, Cincinnati Nat'l. (Tommy Griffith or Thomas Herman Griffith (1889-1967). Color portrait of Tommy Griffith with the Cincinnati Reds. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa. Includes list of 30 players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Haines, Lexington. (William Haines. Black-and-white portrait of William Haines with the Lexington Colts (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hartsel Phila. Amer. (Topsy Hartsel or Tully Frederick Hartsel (1874-1944). Color portrait of Topsy Hartsel with the Philadelphia Athletics. An elephant is in the top left corner and 'Athletics' is I the top right. Verso: Frederick T. Hartsel. 'Topsy' Hartsel, the Champion Athletics' utility outfielder, has been on their roster since 1902. Hartsel is short in stature but solidly built, and in some years has walloped the ball hard. In 1900 with Indianapolis he batted .300, in 1901 with the Cubs his figures reached .339, and in 1903 he bit .311 for the Athletics. He only played in the fifth game of the World's Championship Series of 1910 and his batting, base running, and fielding helped the Athletics to win that decisive contest. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d. Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • C.L. Herzog of the Boston Nationals. (Buck Herzog or Charles Lincoln Herzog (1885-1953). Color portrait of Buck Herzog. A 'B' is in the top left corner and 'Rustlers' is in the top right. The team is the Boston Rustlers. Verso: Charles L. Herzog. Charles L. Herzog, who covered the difficult position of third base for the Boston Nationals the larger part of the season of 1910, was obtained by them from the Giants, with whom he had little chance to develop, as he was not called on to play regularly. In 1908 he connected with the ball to the extent of 48 hits and scored 38 runs in 59 games, a very good record. In 1910 his 95 hits included 20 doubles, 3 triples and 3 home runs, amounting to 130 bases in all. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Heveron, Lexington. (Heveron, full name and dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of player Heveron with the Lexington Colts (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hicks, Frankfort. (J. Hicks, full name and dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of J. Hicks with the Frankfort Statesmen (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hinchman Columbus. (Bill Hinchman or William White Hinchman (1883-1963). Black-and-white portrait of Bill Hinchman on a round card. The team is the Columbus Senators (Ohio). Verso: Stars of the Diamond. The Gum That's Round. One in every 5 ¢ package of Colgan's Violet Chips and Mint Chips. Beware of Imitations.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hoffmann, Frankfort. (Fred Hoffman or Fred Hoffmann. Black-and-white portrait of Fred Hoffmann (or Hoffman) with the Frankfort Statesmen (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Howell, p. St. Louis Amer. (Harry Howell. Harry Taylor Howell (1876-1956). Color portrait of Harry Howell with the St. Louis Browns. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hunter, Point Pleasant. (F.M. Hunter. Black-and-white portrait of Point Pleasant player F. Hunter. The team is in Point Pleasant, West Virginia. Verso: Series No. 4. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Jennings, Detroit Amer. (Hughie Jennings or Hugh Ambrose Jennings (1869-1928) also known as Ee-Yah. Color portrait of Hughie Jennings in a uniform with a 'D' on it. The team is the Detroit Tigers. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa. Includes list of 30 players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Joss Cleveland Amer. (Addie Joss or Adrian Joss (1880-1911). Color portrait of Addie Joss framed by two baseball bats. A 'C' is in the top left corner and 'Naps' is in the top right. The team is the Cleveland Naps (Ohio). Verso: A. Joss. 'Addie' Joss, whose death in 1911 was a great loss to his team and to the national game, was a native of Cleveland, and had always played with the team from that city. His best year was 1908, when he won 24 games out of 35, and put the Naps within half a point of the pennant. On October 2 of that year he pitched a game against Chicago, when no player of the White Sox reached first. He was a faithful player, liked by his team mates and respected by the public, many thousands of whom attended his funeral. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Keifel Lexington. (George Keifel. Black-and-white portrait of George Keifel with the Lexington Colts (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Killerfer St. Louis Am. (Bill Killefer or William Killefer (1887-1960) also known as Reindeer Bill. Black-and-white portrait of Bill Killefer on a round card. The team is the St. Louis Browns. Verso: Stars of the Diamond. The Gum That's Round. One in every 5 ¢ package of Colgan's Violet Chips and Mint Chips. Beware of Imitations.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kircher, Shelbyville. (George Kircher or George C. Kircher (1887-1949). Born in Louisville, Kentucky. Black-and-white portrait of George Kircher with the Shelbyville Grays (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kleinow Boston Amer. (Red Kleinow or John Peter Kleinow (1877-1929). Color portrait of Red Kleinow framed by two baseball bats. A 'B' is in the top left corner and 'Red Sox' is in the top right. The team is the Boston Red Sox. Verso: John Kleinow. 'Jack' Kleinow, the veteran catcher whom the Boston Americans got from the New York Highlanders late in May 1910, was let go because the husky Sweeney was at that time apparently going to catch nearly all the games for the Yankees. In Boston the case was different, Carrigan having no efficient substitute till Kleinow arrived, and during the balance of the season caught many good games for the Red Sox. Soon after joining the Bostons, he slammed out four hits in four times up in one game with Detroit. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kleinow, Boston Amer. (Red Kleinow or John Peter Kleinow (1877-1929). Color portrait of Red Kleinow in a catcher's uniform. The team is the Boston Red Sox. Verso: New Base Ball Series 350-460 Subjects. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. Va.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Knight, s.s. New York Am. (John Knight or John Wesley Knight (1885-1965) also known as Schoolboy. Color portrait of John Knight with the New York Highlanders. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Krause Phila. Amer. (Harry Krause or Harry William Krause (1888-1940) also known as Hal. Color portrait of Harry Krause. An elephant is in the top left corner and 'Athletics' is in the top right. The team is the Philadelphia Athletics. Verso: Harry Krause. Harry Krause, the Philadelphia Athletics' young southpaw, made his base ball debut with the San Jose team, in 1907. Connie Mack signed him, and sent him to the Harrisburg team of the Tri-State League for seasoning. The young pitcher led that league in 1908, and in 1909, given a chance with the Athletics, made a phenomenal record. He won the first ten games he pitched, only five runs being made off him in the whole ten games. In 1910 ill health and a bad arm prevented his doing much, but he is expected to again cut a wide swatch in 1911. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Floyd M. Kroh of the Chicago Nationals. (Rube Kroh or Floyd Myron Kroh (1886-1944). Color portrait of Floyd Kroh. A bear is in the top left corner and 'Cubs' is in the top right corner. The team is the Chicago Cubs. Verso: Floyd M. Kroh. Floyd Kroh, the southpaw pitcher whom the Louisville team of the American Association got from the Chicago Nationals in August, 1910, has had experience in several leagues. In 1908 he was playing for Johnstown, in the Tri-State League, and on Mary 1st shut out Wilmington without a hit in ten innings. Other good work the same season caused the Cubs to buy his released, and in 1909 he succeeded in winning nine games out of thirteen. Among the few games he pitched for Louisville in 1910 was one of fifteen innings, which he won himself by batting in the winning run. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lajoie Cleveland Amer. (Nap or Napoleon Lajoie (1874-1959) also known as Larry and Poli. Color portrait of Nap Lajoie. The team is the Cleveland Naps. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Leach, c.f. Pittsburg Nat'l. (Tommy Leach or Thomas William Leach (1877-1969). Color portrait of Tommy Leach with the Pittsburg Pirates or Pittsburgh Pirates. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Sam Leever of the Pittsburg Nationals. (Sam Leever or Samuel Leever (1871-1953) also known as Deacon and the Goshen Schoolmaster. Color portrait of Sam Leever with a pirate in the top left corner and 'Pirates' in the top right. The team is the Pittsburg Pirates or Pittsburgh Pirates. Verso: Sam Leever. Sam Leever, the Pirate's veteran twirler, has some fine records to his credit. In 1901, 1902 and 1903, when the Pittsburgs won the National League pennant, his percentages of victories were .737, .696, and .781. This last figure led the National League in 1903, and in 1905 he was again first with a percentage of .800. In 1909 he pitched few full games, but got a figure of .889. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • L'Heureux, Lexington. (L'Heureux, full name and dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of player L'Heureux with the Lexington Colts (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Loos, Danville. (Pete Loos or Ivan Loos (1878-1956). Black-and-white portrait of Pete Loos with the Danville Red Sox (Virginia). Verso: Series No. 2. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lord Boston Am. L. (Harry Lord or Harry Donald Lord (1882-1948). Black-and-white portrait of Harry Lord on a round card. The team is the Boston Red Sox. Verso: Stars of the Diamond. The Gum That's Round. One in every 5 ¢ package of Colgan's Violet Chips and Mint Chips. Beware of Imitations.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Marquard, p, N.Y. Nat'l. (Rube Marquard or Richard William Marquard (1886-1980). Color portrait of Rube Marquard with the New York Giants. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • C Mathewson of the New York Nationals. (Christy Mathewson or Christopher Mathewson (1880-1925) also known as Big Six, Matty, and the Christian Gentleman. Color portrait of Christy Mathewson. An 'NY' is in the top left corner and 'Giants' is in the top right. The team is the New York Giants. Verso: Christopher Mathewson. Christy Mathewson, idol of New York fans, and one of the greatest pitchers that game has ever known, has been one great factor in helping the Giants to their good standing. Absolutely subduing the Athletics in 1905 and mowing down the Yankees in 1910 (14 in one game), were only samples of his work. His splendid control is shown by the fact that in four years ending 1910 he only gave 191 bases on balls and hit eight batters (none in 1909) while striking out 770 men. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mathewson, N.Y. Nat'l. (Christy Mathewson or Christopher Mathewson (1880-1925) also known as Big Six, Matty, and the Christian Gentleman. Color portrait of Christy Mathewson with the New York Giants. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa. Includes list of 30 players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • A.A. Mattern of the Boston Nationals. (Al Mattern or Alonzo Albert Mattern (1883-1958). Color portrait of Al Mattern. A 'B' is in the top left corner and 'Rustlers' is in the top right. The team is the Boston Rustlers. Verso: A.A. Mattern. A.A. Mattern, the star southpaw of the Boston National League Club, commence playing professional ball with Indianapolis in 1905. In 1906 he was with Montréal, and in 1907, pitching for the Holyokes of the Connecticut League, helped them win the pennant by securing 16 victories out of 23 games. In the fall of 1907 he was bought by the Boston Nationals and has developed into the mainstay of their pitching staff. Many offers have been made for him, but Manager Tenney intends to keep him for a nucleus around which to build a winning corps of pitchers. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Matthewson, p. N.Y, Nat'l. (Christy Mathewson or Christopher Mathewson (1880-1925) also known as Big Six, Matty, and the Christian Gentleman. Color portrait of Christy Mathewson with the New York Giants. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • J J McGraw of the New York Nationals. (J.J. McGraw, John McGraw or John Joseph McGraw (1873-1934) also known as Mugsy and Little Napoleon. Color portrait of John McGraw with the New York Giants. Verso: John J. McGraw. When John J. McGraw took hold of the Giants, July 19, 1901, their figure in the race was .315. Next year he brought them up to a finish in second place. In 1904 they won their first pennant in fifteen years, and in 1905 won both the National and World's Championships. Since then they have stood second in 1906, 1908 and 1910, third in 1909, and fourth in 1907. McGraw has done wonders in putting a winning spirit into the Giants, and what is more important, has developed a group of young players who will insure the future high standing of the team. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • McGraw, N.Y. Nat'l. (J.J. McGraw, John McGraw or John Joseph McGraw (1873-1934) also known as Mugsy and Little Napoleon. Color portrait of John McGraw with the New York Giants. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • McIlvain, Frankfort. (McIlvain or McIlvaine, full name and dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of player McIlvain with the Frankfort Statesmen (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects -Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Harry McIntire of the Chicago Nationals. (Harry McIntire or John Reid McIntire (1879-1949). Color portrait of Harry McIntire with the Chicago Cubs. A bear is in the top left corner and 'Cubs' is in the right. Verso: Harry McIntire. Harry McIntire commenced playing professional ball with Dayton, Ohio, and after a varied experience in the minors and with Brooklyn, became a member of the Cubs' pitching staff in 1901, and succeeded in turning in thirteen wins. His batting average that year was better than that of most pitchers, only four in the National League doing better. He has a record of 108 strike outs in 1908, 91 in 1909, and 65 in 1910. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • McIntyre Detroit. (Matty McIntyre or Matthew Martin McIntyre (1880-1920). Black-and-white portrait of Matty McIntyre with the Detroit Tigers on a round card. Verso: Stars of the Diamond. The Gum That's Round. One in every 5 ¢ package of Colgan's Violet Chips and Mint Chips. Beware of Imitations.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • McKernan, Paris. (Edward McKernan, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of Edward McKernan with the Paris Bourbonites (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • McLean, L. Cincinnati Nat'l. (Larry McLean or John Bannerman McLean (1881-1921). Color-portrait of Larry McLean with the Cincinnati Reds. Verso: Base Ball Gum. This card is one of a set of 50 Base Ball Players. Prominent members of National and American leagues, one of which is wrapped with every package of base ball gum. Manufactured only by John H. Dockman & Sons.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • McQuillan, p. Phila. Nat'l. (George McQuillan or George Watt McQuillan (1885-1940). Color portrait of George McQuillan with the Philadelphia Phillies. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Fred Merkle of the New York Nationals. (Fred Merkle or Frederick Charles Merkle (1888-1956). Color portrait of Fred Merkle with the New York Giants. Verso: An 'NY' is in the top left corner and 'Giants' is in the top right. Fred Merkle. Fred Merkle, once substitute and now regular first baseman for the Giants, first played ball with the smaller independent and semi-professional teams of the middle West. Eventually signing with the Tecumseh Club he became one of the best players in the Southern Michigan Association, and was secured by the New York Nationals. His playing has steadily improved, and the records show that he is developing into the ideal first baseman, who must be a top notch fielder and extra hard hitter. Includes statistics for 1909 and 1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Merkle New York Natl.l. (Fred Merkle or Frederick Charles Merkle (1888-1956). Black-and-white portrait of Fred Merkle with the New York Giants on a round card. Verso: Stars of the Diamond. The Gum That's Round. One in every 5 ¢ package of Colgan's Violet Chips and Mint Chips. Beware of Imitations.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • J.T. Meyers of the New York Nationals. (Chief Meyers or John Tortes Meyers (1880-1971). Color portrait of Chief Meyers with the New York Giants. Verso: An 'NY' is in the top left corner and 'Giants' is in the top right. Verso: John T. Meyers. 'Chief' Meyers, who did the larger part of the catching for the Giants in 1909 and 1910, has done some very high grade work, considering the short time he has been in the National League. In 1910 he had 154 assists, which fact shows that his throwing arm worked well most of the time. His hard hitting, especially effective when the bases were tenanted, won many a game for his team. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Meyers, Lexington. (Harry Meyers, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of Harry Meyers with the Lexington Colts (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • J.D. Miller of the Pittsburg Nationals. (Dots Miller of John Barney Miller (1886-1923). Color portrait of Dots Miller with the Pittsburg Pirates or Pittsburgh Pirates. A pirate is in the top left corner and 'Pirates' is in the top right. Verso: John D. Miller. John D. Miller, the young second baseman of the Pittsburg Club, played his first professional ball with the Easton Club, for the outlaw Atlantic League, in 1908. Late in that summer he signed with the Pirates, but was loaned for the balance of the season to the McKeesport team of the Ohio-Pennsylvania League. His first season in major company was a most successful one for a young player. His batting and fielding both made him valuable to the team in capturing the 1909 pennant. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Moye, Montgomery. (Moye, full name and dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of player Moye with the Montgomery Miners (West Virginia). Verso: Series No. 4. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mullin, Winchester (Charlie Mullen or Charles George Mullen (1889-1963). Black-and-white portrait of Charlie Mullen with the Winchester Hustlers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Jack Murray of the New York Nationals. (Red Murray or John Joseph Murray (1884-1958). Color portrait of Red Murray with the New York Giants. An 'NY' is in the top left corner and 'Giants' is in the top right. Verso: John J. Murray. 'Red' Murray, whom the Giants got from St. Louis in 1909, had already a fine record at the bat and on the paths, and has made good. His 303 hits in 1909 and 1910 totaling 418 bases, were often made at most opportune times, and in the outfield he has spoiled many a prospective homer or three-bagger by a dazzling catch. His throwing to the plate has been deadly, as shown by his record more assists in 1909 and 1910 than any other outfield in the National League. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Murray, N.Y. Nat'l. (Red Murray or John Joseph Murray (1884-1958). Color portrait of Red Murray with the New York Giants. Verso: Base Ball Series 350 Subjects. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25. 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Myers, N.Y. Nat'l. (Chief Meyers or John Tortes Meyers (1880-1971). Color portrait of Chief Meyers with the New York Giants. Verso: Base Ball Series 350 Subjects. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25. 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ochs, Greenville. (Charles Ochs, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of the Charles Ochs with the Greenville Spinners (South Carolina). Verso: Series No. 5. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • O'Leary Detroit Amer. (Charley O'Leary or Charles Timothy O'Leary (1882-1941). Color portrait of Charley O'Leary with the Detroit Tigers. A tiger is in the top left corner and 'Tigers' is in the top right. Verso: Charles O'Leary. Charles O'Leary, one of the Detroit Americans' infielders, is a native of Chicago, and picked up his base ball experience with some of the strong independent teams about that city. In 1900 he was on the roster of the Chicago White Sox, and after a couple of years with the Des Moines team, came back to the majors with Detroit in 1904, and has done much good work for them in their pennant winning years. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Oyler, Maysville. (William Oyler or William B. Oyler, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of William Oyler with the Maysville Rivermen (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Parent Chicago Amer. (Freddy Parent or Frederick Alfred Parent (1875-1972). Color portrait of Freddy Parent with the Chicago White Sox. A white stocking is in the top left corner and 'White Sox' is in the top right. Verso: F. Parent. 'Freddy' Parent, the utility fielder whom the Chicago Americans released to Baltimore in May, 1911, played at short during most of his connection with the White Sox, but in 1909 played 37 games in the outfield without an error, and in 1910 played in the outfield in nearly all his games. He came to Chicago from the Boston Americans with a fine record for his playing at short and in the outfield. In 1903 and 1904 when the Bostons won the American League pennant, he batted .304 and .296. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Pastorious, Brooklyn Nat'l. (Jim Pastorius or James Washington Pastorius (1881-1941) also known as Sunny Jim. Color portrait of Jim Pastorius with the Brooklyn Superbas. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa. Includes 30 players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • C. Phillippe of the Pittsburg Nationals. (Deacon Phillippe or Charles Louis Phillippe, originally spelled Phillippi (1872-1952). Color portrait of Deacon Phillippe with the Pittsburg Pirates or Pittsburgh Pirates. A pirate is in the top left corner and 'Pirates' is in the top right. Verso: Charles Phillippe. 'Deacon' Charles Phillippe is one of the most reliable members of the Pirates' pitching staff. He came to Pittsburg in 1900, having been brought over from Louisville with Fred Clarke and other stars by President Dreyfuss. In 1901, 1902 and 1903 he was one of the corps of twirlers that helped Clarke laud the Pirates at the head of the National League. He has been a steady player in all senses of the word, and in his great control may be judged from the fact that in 1909 and 1910, while taking part in 53 games, he only gave 23 bases on balls. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d. Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Reed, Winchester. (McKee Reed or L. McKee Reed, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of McKee Reed with the Winchester Hustlers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • E.M. Reulbach of the Chicago Nationals. (Ed Reulbach or Edward Marvin Reulbach (1882-1962) also known as Big Ed. Color portrait of Ed Reulbach with the Chicago Cubs. A bear is in the top left corner and 'Cubs' is in the top right. Verso: Edward M. Reulbach. 'Big Ed' Reulbach, the Chicago Nationals' tall pitcher, has caused many victories for them to go on the records. In 1906, 1907 and 1908 he led the league, and with the percentages of .826, .810 and .774. On September 26, 1908, when the grueling finish between the Giants and Cubs was on, he shut out Brooklyn in both games of a doubleheader. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Robinson Louisville. (Rabbit Robinson or William Clyde Robinson (1882-1915). Black-and-white portrait of Rabbit Robinson with the Louisville Colonels (Kentucky). Verso: Stars of the Diamond. The Gum That's Round. One in every 5 ¢ package of Colgan's Violet Chips and Mint Chips. Beware of Imitations.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Schaefer Washington Am. (Germany Schaefer or William Herman Schaefer (1876-1919) also known as Liberty. Color portrait of Germany Schaefer with the Washington Senators. A 'W' is in the top left corner and 'Senators' is in the top right. Verso: Herman Schaefer. 'Germany' Schaefer, whom the Washington Americans got from the Detroits during the season of 1909, is one of the most versatile players in the major leagues. He has played all over the infield and outfield, is a reliable hitter, a good base runner, and the star comedian of his team. He began his professional experience with the Sioux Falls Club in 1899, and has since played in the American Association and the National Leagues. As a coach Schaefer's fun making has made him a popular favorite. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d. Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • F.M. Schulte of the Chicago Nationals. (Frank Schulte or Frank M. Schulte (1882-1949) also known as Wildfire. Color portrait of Frank Schulte with the Chicago Cubs. A bear is in the top left corner and 'Cubs' is in the top right. Verso: Frank M. Schulte. Frank M. Schulte, one of the Cubs' star outfielders, was signed by them in 1904, and has thus been an active agent in helping them land the pennant four times. All critics admire the easy and graceful style of his hitting; that is also practical the figures for 1910 show--168 hits for a total of 257 bases. His batting for his seven years with Chicago averages .273. In the field has he an excellent record. In 1908 he only made one error in 89 games, giving him an average of .992, a world's record for outfielders. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d. Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Schultz, Maysville. (John Schultz, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of John Schultz with the Maysville Rivermen (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scott Chicago Amer. (Jim Scott or James Scott (1888-1957) also known as Death Valley Jim. Color portrait of Jim Scott with the Chicago White Sox. A white stocking is in the top left corner and 'White Sox' is in the top right. Verso: James Scott. James Scott, one of the Chicago Americans' pitchers, first played professionally with independent teams in Peoria, Illinois, and Kankakee, Illinois. In 1904 and 1907 he pitched for Davenport of the I.I.I. League, and in 1906 for Rock Island, of the same league. In 1907 and 1908 he belonged to the strong Wichita Club of the Western Association. The White Sox bought his release in the fall of 1908, and in 1909 and 1910 he did much good work for them. In 1910 although he finished on the wrong side of the record in the 299 2-3 innings he pitched his opponents only made 187 hits in 807 times at bat, a batting average of .225. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Sinex, Lexington. (Lawrence Sinex or Lawrence F. Sinex, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of Lawrence Sinex with the Lexington Colts (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Smith, Portsmouth. (Unknown. Could be August J. Smith circa 1908, Joseph H. Smith circa 1909, or W.G. Smith circa 1910. Black-and-white portrait of player Smith with the Portsmouth Truckers (Virginia). Verso: Series No. 2. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tony Smith of Brooklyn Nationals. (Tony Smith or Anthony Smith (1884-1964). Color portrait of Tony Smith with the Brooklyn Superbas. A 'B' is in the top left corner and 'Superbas' is in the right. Verso: Tony Smith. Tony Smith, whom the Brooklyn Nationals got from the Cubs in the spring of 1910, played in 1909 with the Sioux City Club of the Western League. During his season with that team he kept the scorers busy, having made 183 hits, including 45 doubles, 6 triples and 6 home runs. It is predicted that with a little more experience in the big league he will be a heavy Creator to Brooklyn's batting average. Includes statistics for 1909-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d. Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Speaker Boston Am. (Tris Speaker or Tristam E. Speaker (1888-1958) also known as the Grey Eagle and Spoke. Color portrait of Tris Speaker with the Boston Red Sox. A 'B' is in the top left corner and 'Red Sox' is in the top right. Verso: Tris Speaker. Tris Speaker, the Boston Americans' hard hitting outfielder, came from Texas, where he batted .318 for the Houston team in 1907. For the 1908 season the Boston management sent him to Little Rock, where he batted .350. Recalled to Boston in 1909 he made 165 hits that year for a total of 242 bases, and in 1910 hit safely 183 times, for 252 bases. He is fast on his feet both in the field and when base-running. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d. Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • T.H. Speaker c.f. Boston (Am. L.) (T.H. Speaker, probably Tris Speaker or Tristam E. Speaker (1888-1958) also known as the Grey Eagle and Spoke. Color portrait of player Speaker with the Boston Red Sox. Verso: Base Ball Caramels. This card is one of a set of thirty-three base ball players, consisting of Pittsburg, Washington and Boston base ball teams, one of which is wrapped with every base ball caramel. Lists players with Pittsburgh, Washington, and Boston. Manufactured only by the American Caramel Co.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Stanage, C. Detroit Amer. (Oscar Stanage or Oscar Harland Stanage, 1883-1964. Color portrait of Oscar Stanage with the Detroit Tigers. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Stengel, Maysville. (Casey Stengel or Charles Dillon Stengel (1890-1975) also known as the Old Perfessor. Black-and-white portrait of Casey Stengel with the Maysville Rivermen (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Stone St. Louis Amer. (George Stone or George Robert Stone (1876-1945). Color portrait of George Stone with the St. Louis Browns. A fleur-de-lis is in the top left corner and 'Browns' is in the top right. Verso: George Stone. George Stone, the hard-hitting outfielder of the S. Louis Americans, has missed few games since he has been on their pay-roll, except in 1909. In the four years ending 1908 he played in 611 games. His aggregate batting average for those four years was .317 and for the six years ending 1910, .298. In 1910 he got two singles, a double and a triple off Pitcher Bender in one game, and June 2, against the Red Sox, got give hits in six times up. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d. Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Street Wash Am. (Gabby Street or Charles Evard Street (1882-1951) also known as Old Sarge. Portrait of Gabby Street with the Washington Senators. A 'W' is in the top left corner and 'Senators' is in the top right. Verso: Charles E. Street. Charles E. Street, who has most of the responsibility behind the bat for the Washington Americans, first played ball in the South. After playing in several minor leagues and with Cincinnati, he started the reason of 1908 with the Washingtons. Street was the first player who ever caught a ball dropped from the Washington Monument, over 500 feet. In his three years with Washington he had 528 assists in 357 games, a fine record. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Summers, p. Detroit Amer. (Ed Summers or Oron Edgar Summers (1884-1953) also known as Kickapoo Ed and Chief. Color portrait of Ed Summers with the Detroit Tigers. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tannehill, 3b Chicago Am. (Lee Tannehill or Lee Ford Tannehill (1880-1938). Color portrait of Lee Tannehill with the Chicago White Sox. Verso: Base Ball Series. 100 Subjects. Base Ball Caramels. Mfg' by American Caramel Co. Phila, PA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Thomas Philadelphia Am. (Ira Thomas or Ira Felix Thomas (1881-1958). Color portrait of Ira Thomas with the Philadelphia Athletics. An elephant is in the top left corner and 'Athletics' is in the top right. Verso: Ira Thomas. Ira Thomas, one of the Philadelphia Athletics' regular catchers, got into professional base ball with the Hartfords, of the Connecticut League in 1902. Afterwards he worked behind the bat for Newark and Providence, and in 1906 and 1907 for the New York Highlanders. In 1908 he caught 40 games for the Detroits, and in 1909 entered on his present engagement with the Athletics. His work for them has been of a high order. Examples of it were his throwing out Ty Cobb give times out of six in the last Detroit-Athletic series of 1910, and his masterly handling of pitching in the World's Championship Series with the Cubs. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d. Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Thoss, Richmond (Ade Thoss, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of Ade Thoss with the Richmond Pioneers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Joe Tinker of the Chicago Nationals. (Joe Tinker or Joseph Bert Tinker (1880-1948). Color portrait of Joe Tinker with the Chicago Cubs. A bear is in in the top left corner and 'Cubs' is in the top right. Verso: Joseph B. Tinker. 'Joe' Tinker, the brilliant Chicago shortstop, has a consistently good record in the field and at bat. In 1908, he played twenty-two consecutive games in June without an error, and at the end of the season led the shortstops with a percentage of 958 on 923 chances. During 1908, 1909, 1910 he hit safely 414 times for 594 total bases, including 73 two-baggers, 34 threebaggers, and 13 home runs. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Toney, Winchester (Fred Toney or Fred Alexandra Toney (1888-1953). Black-and-white portrait of Fred Toney with the Winchester Hustlers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kimbrough, Lexington. (Marion L. Kimbrough, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of Marion Kimbrough with the Lexington Colts (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA. Title supplied by cataloger.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Viox, Lexington. (Jim Viox or James Harry Viox (1890-1969). Black-and-white portrait of Jim Viox with the Lexington Colts (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Wagner, Pittsburg Nat'l. (Honus Wagner or John Peter Wagner (1874-1955) also known as the Flying Dutchman. Color portrait of Honus Wagner with the Pittsburg Pirates or Pittsburgh Pirates. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa. Includes list of 30 players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Wagner Pittsburgh. (Honus Wagner or John Peter Wagner (1874-1955) also known as the Flying Dutchman. Black-and-white portrait of Honus Wagner with the Pittsburg Pirates or Pittsburgh Pirates on a round card. Verso: Stars of the Diamond. The Gum That's Round. One in every 5 ¢ package of Colgan's Violet Chips and Mint Chips. Beware of Imitations.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Walden, Richmond. (H.O. Walden. Black-and-white portrait of H.O. Walden with the Richmond Pioneers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Walsh Chic. Amer. (Ed Walsh or Edward Augustine Walsh (1881-1959) also known as Big Ed. Color portrait of Ed Walsh with the Chicago White Sox. A white stocking is in the top left corner and 'White Sox' is in the top right. Verso: Edward Walsh. 'Ed' Walsh, star twirler of the Chicago Americans, is one of the very best spit-ball pitchers in the business. In 1904 he only went 10 full games for Chicago, but kept developing and in 1906, when the White Sox won the pennant and the World's Championship, was largely instrumental in their success. In 1910, although he did not break even, an analyst shows that in the 369 2-3 innings he pitched, opposing teams were charged with 1,294 times at bat and only made 242 hits, a batting average of .187. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d. Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Wehrell, Anderson. (Fred Wehrell, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of Fred Wehrell with the Anderson Electricians (South Carolina). Verso: Series No. 5. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Whitaker, Richmond. (J.F. Whitaker, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of J.F. Whitaker with the Richmond Pioneers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • White Chicago Amer. (Doc White or Guy Harris White (1879-1969). Color portrait of Doc White with the Chicago White Sox. A white stocking is in the top left corner and 'White Sox' is in the top right. Verso: G.H. White. 'Doc' White, the Chicago Americans' left-handed pitcher, is one of their most dependable workers. In the seven years ending 1910 he has never failed to finish the season on the right side of the ledger. In 1906, when the White Sox won the American League pennant, he contributed 18 victories out of the 24 games he was responsible for. He is a good fielder, and does not fail to cover first when the baseman has to go after the ball. In 1910 he had 30 put outs, more than any other pitcher in the American League, and more than any two pitchers in the National League. 'Doc,' besides being a good ball player, has had considerable fame as a singer and writer of songs. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d. Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kirb White of the Pittsburg Nationals. (Kirby White or Oliver Kirby White (1884-1943) also known as Red and Buck. With the Pittsburg Pirates or Pittsburgh Pirates. Verso: Kirb White. Kirb White, the big right handed pitcher of the Pittsburg Nationals, was born in Ohio, and made his entry in organized base ball in 1907 with the Lancaster team of the Ohio State League. In 1908 he helped the Lancasters win the Ohio pennant with the fine record of 28 wins out of 40 games. He struck out 262 men during the season, incidentally winning one eighteen inning game when he only gave one base on balls, and taking another game when not a hit was made off him. His services were secured by the Chicago Cubs, who let him go to the Boston Nationals, who in turn traded him to Pittsburg. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Williams Indianapolis. (Otto Williams or Otto George Williams (1877-1937). Black-and-white portrait of Otto Williams with the Indianapolis Indians (Indiana) on a round card. Verso: Stars of the Diamond. The Gum That's Round. One in every 5 ¢ package of Colgan's Violet Chips and Mint Chips. Beware of Imitations.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Wills, Richmond. (Herndon Wills, dates unknown. Black-and-white portrait of Herndon Wills with the Richmond Pioneers (Kentucky). Verso: Series No. 6. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • J. Owen Wilson of the Pittsburg Nationals. (Chief Wilson or John Owen Wilson (1883-1954). Color portrait of Chief Wilson with the Pittsburg Pirates or Pittsburgh Pirates. A pirate is in the top left corner and 'Pirates' is in the top right. Verso: J. Owen Wilson. J. Owen Wilson, now one of the Pirates' reliable guardians of the outer line of defense, while with Des Moines in 1907 was see by Manager Clarke. Clarke immediately caused his release to be secured by Pittsburg, and time has verified the correctness of his judgment. Each season the tall outfielder has improved in batting and fielding. In 1910 his 148 hits were good for a total of 200 bases. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Geo R. Wiltse of the New York Nationals. (Hooks Wiltse or George Leroy Wiltse (1879-1959). Color portrait of Hooks Wiltse with the New York Giants. An 'NY' is in the top left corner and 'Giants' is in the top right. Verso: George Wiltse. George Wiltse, the Giants' tall side-wheeler, has been a valuable asset to them. In 1904 when they first won the National Championship under McGraw, his percentage of victories was .813, and in 1905 he again helped them with a percentage of .714. His greatest feat was pitching ten innings against Philadelphia July 4, 1908, without a hit or run. Only thirty-one men faced him. Includes statistics for 1908-1910. Base Ball Series 400 Designs. Piedmont. The Cigarette of Quality. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Wiltse N.Y. Nat'l. (Hooks Wiltse or George Leroy Wiltse (1879-1959). Color portrait of Hooks Wiltse with the New York Giants. Verso: Base Ball Stars. This card is one of a set of 30 stars from original photographs. Manufactured only by Standard Caramel Co., Lancaster, Pa. Includes list of 30 players and teams.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Woolums, Lynchburg. (Bart Woolums or Bart C. Woolums (b. 1888). Black-and-white portrait of Bart Woolums with the Lynchburg Shoemakers (Virginia). Verso: Series No. 2. Old Mill Cigarettes. Base Ball Subjects - Large Assortment. Factory No. 25, 2d Dist. VA) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [College of Business, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Cleanup crew lowers suction device into the basement on the north side of the University of Louisville College of Business on the afternoon of the flood. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: This Series of pictures shows the north end of the Basement of the business school. The Water line that I marked was 22", We had to crane "Big Blue Bertha" down to the landing in order to get enough suction hose in the water to pump out the basement. The water entered the building thru the access to the tunnel that supplies steam and chilled water to the building. This water came from the Education Building tunnel access. Danny Carter the plumbing Foreman and his crew did an amazing job making the water go away. The damage that was done in the atrium is seen from above. Lots of drywall and furniture. No one got hurt!!!! Yea!) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [College of Business, University of Louisville, basement, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A green suction tube floats in the flooded basement of the University of Louisville College of Business. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: This Series of pictures shows the north end of the Basement of the business school. The Water line that I marked was 22", We had to crane "Big Blue Bertha" down to the landing in order to get enough suction hose in the water to pump out the basement. The water entered the building thru the access to the tunnel that supplies steam and chilled water to the building. This water came from the Education Building tunnel access. Danny Carter the plumbing Foreman and his crew did an amazing job making the water go away. The damage that was done in the atrium is seen from above. Lots of drywall and furniture. No one got hurt!!!! Yea!) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [College of Business, University of Louisville, north side, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Plumbing crew adjusts a blue water pumping machine outside the north entrance to the University of Louisville College of Business. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: This Series of pictures shows the north end of the Basement of the business school. The Water line that I marked was 22", We had to crane "Big Blue Bertha" down to the landing in order to get enough suction hose in the water to pump out the basement. The water entered the building thru the access to the tunnel that supplies steam and chilled water to the building. This water came from the Education Building tunnel access. Danny Carter the plumbing Foreman and his crew did an amazing job making the water go away. The damage that was done in the atrium is seen from above. Lots of drywall and furniture. No one got hurt!!!! Yea!) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [College of Business, University of Louisville, parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A long suction hose pours water into the parking lot north of the University of Louisville College of Business. Water is being pumped out of the basement. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: This Series of pictures shows the north end of the Basement of the business school. The Water line that I marked was 22", We had to crane "Big Blue Bertha" down to the landing in order to get enough suction hose in the water to pump out the basement.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [College of Business, University of Louisville, south wing atrium, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View of the flooded south wing atrium of the University of Louisville College of Business. What appears to be a Gallopalooza horse sits in front of the Reinhardt Academic Center.) (Photographer Comments: This Series of pictures shows the north end of the Basement of the business school. The Water line that I marked was 22", We had to crane "Big Blue Bertha" down to the landing in order to get enough suction hose in the water to pump out the basement.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [College of Business, University of Louisville, basement, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Chairs lay sideways in the flooded basement of the University of Louisville College of Business. Debris on the wall suggests that the water level has decreased since the height of the flooding. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: This Series of pictures shows the north end of the Basement of the business school. The Water line that I marked was 22", We had to crane "Big Blue Bertha" down to the landing in order to get enough suction hose in the water to pump out the basement. The water entered the building thru the access to the tunnel that supplies steam and chilled water to the building. This water came from the Education Building tunnel access. Danny Carter the plumbing Foreman and his crew did an amazing job making the water go away. The damage that was done in the atrium is seen from above. Lots of drywall and furniture. No one got hurt!!!! Yea!) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Education building, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A reddish pool of fuel oil leaks out of two large vents in the side of the on the University of Louisville College of Education and Human Development. Photograph was taken in the early evening.) (Photographer Comments: These are pictures of the Fuel oil cleanup behind Education. Petit Environmental used a huge Vac Truck to Vacuum the oil off of the water. The residual oil was soaked up and put in drums for Disposal. You can see the top of the mechanical room door in the lower level of Education and the R.D.'s air conditioner behind Unitas.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Crawford Gym, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Two workers stand outside the Crawford Gym on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus while a hose pumps flood water out of the mechanical room. Photograph was taken in the early morning on the day after the flooding.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Crawford Gym, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Several hoses lay across the threshold of a door leading out of the mechanical room of the Crawford Gym on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning on the day after the flooding.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Education building, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Two men sweep water and debris outside the on the University of Louisville College of Education and Human Development the day after the flooding. Photograph was taken in the early morning.) (Photographer Comments: These are pictures of the Fuel oil cleanup behind Education. Petit Environmental used a huge Vac Truck to Vacuum the oil off of the water. The residual oil was soaked up and put in drums for Disposal. You can see the top of the mechanical room door in the lower level of Education and the R.D.'s air conditioner behind Unitas.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Education building, mechanical level, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Plastic sheeting hangs from the ceiling of the mechanical level of the University of Louisville College of Education and Human Development. The floor of the room appears to still be wet even though the flood water has been pumped out. Photograph was taken in the late morning on the day after the flooding occurred.) (Photographer Comments: This is what was left after the water was pumped out. All of the motors were replaced, all insulation is being replaced on the piping and the duct-work. Cleaned and sanitized. New Emergency Generator on the way. Elevators...........................not good.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Unitas Tower dormitory, mechanical level, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Mechanical level of the Unitas Tower dorm on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus, which is still flooded the day after the storm. Photograph was taken in the late morning the day after the flood.) (Photographer Comments: Unitas Tower Dormitory. The boilers pictured were put in about 3 months prior to the flood. The air handler was completely stripped of insulation and sanitized. All of the insulation in the mechanical room is being stripped and replaced.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Unitas Tower dormitory, mechanical level, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Standing water covers the floor of the mechanical level of the Unitas Tower dormitory on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Photograph was taken in the late morning the day after the flooding.) (Photographer Comments: Unitas Tower Dormitory. The boilers pictured were put in about 3 months prior to the flood. The air handler was completely stripped of insulation and sanitized. All of the insulation in the mechanical room is being stripped and replaced.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Floyd Street from Student Activities Center, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Floyd Street near the southern entrance to the Track and Soccer Field. Photograph was taken in the late morning from the courtyard between the SAC and the Floyd Street Parking Garage.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Law Library, basement, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flood damage in the basement of the Law Library at the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law. Wet carpet and drywall were quickly removed to prevent mold from growing.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Outer Loop, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Cars drive along the Outer Loop. View shows flooded median between houses along the north side of the street. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Outer Loop, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Mailbox stands in flooded median along the north side of Outer Loop. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Floyd Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Floyd Street facing north between the Floyd Street Parking Garage and the Track and Soccer Field. A line of cars drive down the center of the street. A man in the foreground wearing a red baseball cap looks at his cell phone. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Montana Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Two cars parked behind a house on Montana Avenue are partially submerged in flood water. Rain falls. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Montana Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View from the porch of a house on Montana Avenue during the rain on August 4, 2009. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Montana Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A woman stands on the porch of a house on Montana Avenue after having been rescued from a car that had stalled in the flooded street. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Montana Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Three people sit on the porch of a house on Montana Avenue watching a man presumably walking in the flooded street. The man walks behind a red truck which is submerged up to the roof. The man is submerged up to his shoulders. Photograph was taken in the afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street, facing south, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Water bubbles up from a drain in the street. The Reynolds Building rises in the background to the right. The street is flooded almost up to the railroad bridge over Third Street. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Handicap entrance, flooded university building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Murky water rises halfway up a glass door serving as the "handicap entrance" to a building on the University of Louisville campus. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Fourth Street, looking north, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Fourth Street looking north from the railroad tracks near Industry Road. Caution tape stretches across Fourth Street limiting access to the flooded area. A TARC bus crosses a the street in the background and the downtown skyline can be seen in the distance. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Man stands in front of room 150D of the Houchens Building with his pants rolled up. He is smiling and pressing keys on his cell phone.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded lower level of the Houchens Building. Steps in the lower left corner lead to the floor which is covered with brown water. A rolled up carpet lays on a couch against the wall.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Student Counseling and Health Center, parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Parking lot between the Student Counseling and Health Center and the Houchens Building, presumably taken from a window of the Houchens Building. A red "Campus Health Services" sign stretches across the side of the building across the parking lot. Flood water reaches the wheel wells of the parked cars.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded lower level of the Houchens Building. A yellow mop bucket floats in the brown water near the staircase.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Two women walk down a flooded hallway toward the camera smiling and waving. One woman is barefoot and has her pants rolled up. A sign over the doorway reads "To Elevator.") (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Man holds up pants legs as he walks in a flooded hallway of the Houchens Building.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Carpet in the Houchens Building partially flooded. Water covers hallway behind the door in the background of the photograph.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [School of Public Health and Information Sciences, basement, room 013, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Back door of Room 013 in the basement of the University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences, broken due to flood waters. Photograph was taken in the mid-afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded backyards of 4406 and 4408 Winnrose Way. Photograph shows a truck submerged up to its chassis. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 am.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Water covers part of Winnrose Way and the front yards lining the street. Photograph was taken in the late morning on August 4, 2009.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way and Fairland Place, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Water receding after the flood at the junction of Winnrose and Fairland Place. A man stands at the water's edge and a woman walks toward a car in a driveway. The sidewalks are wet. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded backyard with covered back porch in the foreground. Branches and other items float in the water. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Rain falls on flooded section of Winnrose avenue. A black plastic garbage can lays in the street. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Metropolitan Sewer District (MSD) truck parked in water on Winnrose Way. Large green tube extends from the top of the truck into the water. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View from the yard of 4404 Winnrose Way. The apparent bend in the road is flooded. Telephone poles and lawn landscaping can be seen rising from the water. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Computer printer covered with dirt from being submerged during flood. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A pile of black plastic garbage bags on the lawn of 4404 Winnrose Way. Large stuffed leopard sits atop pile. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Large pile of wooden planks and other material sits at the end of the driveway of 4408 Winnrose Way. A red dumpster sits in the driveway. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Elderly gentleman sits in a chair surrounded by furniture, dishware and water bottles. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A black dumpster sits in the driveway of 4405 Winnrose Way with a blue car parked in front of it. Debris from the flood sits in the backyard of the neighbor's house. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A green dumpster sits in the driveway. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Warnock Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded sidewalk and street behind buildings on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Winnrose Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Shoes, an orange ball, and a storage container float in brown water inside the house at 4404 Winnrose Way. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Images were taken in the Algonquin Gardens Subdivision which is bounded on the west by 45th Street, on the East by 43rd Street, on the North by Virginia Avenue and on the South by Whayne Support. The images looking at the back yard of homes were taken from the home of 1200 Fairland Place. Homes with most damage were 4408 and 4405 Winnrose Avenue. First images were taken at approximately 10:30 AM.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Warnock Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View of flooded Warnock Street shows car and people. The railroad tracks are covered with water as well. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Warnock Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Long view of Warnock Street with circular drive in the foreground. The street is flooded as far as the eye can see, including over the railroad tracks. Several people stand next to a truck stopped in the middle of the street. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building and Service Complex parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View from Lutz Hall of the flooded parking lot between the Houchens Building and the Service Complex on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. The Floyd Street Parking Garage can be seen in the background. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Warnock Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A view facing east down Warnock Street. A newspaper box in the left middle ground is almost completely submerged. The Ralph Wright Natatorium on the University of Louisville Belknap campus appears in the background and cars are stopped on Warnock Street near its intersection with Floyd Street. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Reynolds Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Reynolds Building is in the background of this photo of flooded Eastern Parkway. Caution tape stretches across the entire street to keep drivers from entering the flooded zone. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Warnock Street circle and driveway next to Lutz Hall, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View of the flooded Crawford Gym parking lot on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. A car sitting in the lot is partially submerged. The Houchens Building and the Floyd Street Parking Garage appear in the background. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Warnock Street and Brook Street viewed from balcony of Lutz Hall, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded corner of Warnock Street and Brook Street presumably taken from a balcony on Lutz Hall on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. The Steam and Chilled Water Plant can be seen in the background and a car on Brook Street is almost completely submerged. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street, facing south, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Dark clouds cover the sky over Third Street near the intersection at Eastern Parkway. The Reynolds Building rises in the right background. The street is flooded almost up to the railroad bridge over Third Street. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Warnock Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View from above of circular drive at the end of Warnock Street presumably taken from Lutz Hall on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Several cars can be seen in standing water in the reserved parking lot between the Houchens Building and the Service Complex. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded parking lot between the Houchens Building and the Student Health and Counseling Center. The Floyd Street Parking Garage is in the distance. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Bloom Street, East, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A white automobile drives through standing water going west on East Bloom Street. A person on a bicycle carrying plastic bags cycles toward the east. Yellow caution tape extends across the intersection of East Bloom Street and Brook Street. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: On Tuesday August 4, 2009, I was working in the Education building with my co-workers. We thought maybe the underpass would flood but we thought that would be the only thing to flood. Boy, were we wrong. We watched from the ERTC our cars on Brook Street vanish under water. We also watched water shooting 5-7 feet in the air from a manhole cover on Cardinal Blvd. We also watched water pour over the loading zone wall. It looked like a waterfall. The pictures I gave you on a CD were taken a few hours and days after the flood. I did give you pictures of my new car. The water covered the hood on my car. Three friends and I lost our cars that day. Three of us had brand new cars (1 only a few months).) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cardinal Boulevard and Brook Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A loose crowd of people walk toward the flooded intersection of Cardinal Boulevard and Brook Street. Yellow caution tape extends across the intersection and orange and white sawhorses stand in the water. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: On Tuesday August 4, 2009, I was working in the Education building with my co-workers. We thought maybe the underpass would flood but we thought that would be the only thing to flood. Boy, were we wrong. We watched from the ERTC our cars on Brook Street vanish under water. We also watched water shooting 5-7 feet in the air from a manhole cover on Cardinal Blvd. We also watched water pour over the loading zone wall. It looked like a waterfall. The pictures I gave you on a CD were taken a few hours and days after the flood. I did give you pictures of my new car. The water covered the hood on my car. Three friends and I lost our cars that day. Three of us had brand new cars (1 only a few months).) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cardinal Boulevard and Brook Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Close-up view of the intersection of Cardinal Boulevard and Brook Street. A sign in the background reads "Caution Do Not Enter When Flooded." Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: On Tuesday August 4, 2009, I was working in the Education building with my co-workers. We thought maybe the underpass would flood but we thought that would be the only thing to flood. Boy, were we wrong. We watched from the ERTC our cars on Brook Street vanish under water. We also watched water shooting 5-7 feet in the air from a manhole cover on Cardinal Blvd. We also watched water pour over the loading zone wall. It looked like a waterfall. The pictures I gave you on a CD were taken a few hours and days after the flood. I did give you pictures of my new car. The water covered the hood on my car. Three friends and I lost our cars that day. Three of us had brand new cars (1 only a few months).) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street, parked cars underwater, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Three cars parked on Brook Street covered in water nearly up to the bottom of their windows. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: On Tuesday August 4, 2009, I was working in the Education building with my co-workers. We thought maybe the underpass would flood but we thought that would be the only thing to flood. Boy, were we wrong. We watched from the ERTC our cars on Brook Street vanish under water. We also watched water shooting 5-7 feet in the air from a manhole cover on Cardinal Blvd. We also watched water pour over the loading zone wall. It looked like a waterfall. The pictures I gave you on a CD were taken a few hours and days after the flood. I did give you pictures of my new car. The water covered the hood on my car. Three friends and I lost our cars that day. Three of us had brand new cars (1 only a few months).) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street and Eastern Parkway, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded intersection of Third Street and Eastern Parkway. A sign in the distance reads "Caution Do Not Enter When Flooded." Orange pylons and sawhorses stand in Eastern Parkway. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: On Tuesday August 4, 2009, I was working in the Education building with my co-workers. We thought maybe the underpass would flood but we thought that would be the only thing to flood. Boy, were we wrong. We watched from the ERTC our cars on Brook Street vanish under water. We also watched water shooting 5-7 feet in the air from a manhole cover on Cardinal Blvd. We also watched water pour over the loading zone wall. It looked like a waterfall. The pictures I gave you on a CD were taken a few hours and days after the flood. I did give you pictures of my new car. The water covered the hood on my car. Three friends and I lost our cars that day. Three of us had brand new cars (1 only a few months).) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Car interior flood damage, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Car interior showing water damage from the August 4, 2009 flood.) (Photographer Comments: On Tuesday August 4, 2009, I was working in the Education building with my co-workers. We thought maybe the underpass would flood but we thought that would be the only thing to flood. Boy, were we wrong. We watched from the ERTC our cars on Brook Street vanish under water. We also watched water shooting 5-7 feet in the air from a manhole cover on Cardinal Blvd. We also watched water pour over the loading zone wall. It looked like a waterfall. The pictures I gave you on a CD were taken a few hours and days after the flood. I did give you pictures of my new car. The water covered the hood on my car. Three friends and I lost our cars that day. Three of us had brand new cars (1 only a few months).) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cardinal Boulevard looking west from Floyd Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View from the east side of the viaduct over Cardinal Boulevard. Water covers the area up to the bottom of a road sign instructing people "Caution Do Not Enter When Flooded." The University of Louisville College of Education and Human Development can be seen in the background. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: On Tuesday August 4, 2009, I was working in the Education building with my co-workers. We thought maybe the underpass would flood but we thought that would be the only thing to flood. Boy, were we wrong. We watched from the ERTC our cars on Brook Street vanish under water. We also watched water shooting 5-7 feet in the air from a manhole cover on Cardinal Blvd. We also watched water pour over the loading zone wall. It looked like a waterfall. The pictures I gave you on a CD were taken a few hours and days after the flood. I did give you pictures of my new car. The water covered the hood on my car. Three friends and I lost our cars that day. Three of us had brand new cars (1 only a few months).) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Southern Parkway, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Three young men paddle down a flooded street near Southern Parkway, two in a canoe and one in a kayak, in the aftermath of the flooding. Yellow caution tape blocks access to the street. The tops of several cars protrude from the flood water.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Southern Parkway, apartment building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A view facing across Southern Parkway. People stand in the flooded parking lot of an apartment building watching something.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [School of Public Health and Information Sciences, stairwell, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Stairwell leading to the basement of the University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences. Caution tape extends from banister to wall limiting access to basement. Photograph was taken in the mid-afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [School of Public Health and Information Sciences, basement, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Yellow rain boots used by clean-up workers sit in the basement stairwell of the University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences. Photograph was taken in the mid-afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [School of Public Health and Information Sciences, basement, room 013, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Employee's desk damaged by flooding in the basement of the University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences. Photograph was taken in the mid-afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [School of Public Health and Information Sciences, basement, room 013, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Room 013 in the basement of the University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences shown from the hallway. A window is missing and dirt covers furniture inside room. Photograph was taken in the mid-afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Southern Parkway, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Three young men paddle down a flooded street near Southern Parkway, two in a canoe and one in a kayak, in the aftermath of the flooding. Yellow caution tape blocks access to the street. The tops of several cars protrude from the flood water.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [School of Public Health and Information Sciences, basement, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Worker removes wall board from basement wall of the University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences following the August 4, 2009 flood. Photograph was taken in the mid-afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [School of Public Health and Information Sciences, basement waterline, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A wall in the basement of the University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences at the University of Louisville shows the high water mark inside the building. Photograph was taken in the mid-afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [School of Public Health and Information Sciences, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Center for Health Hazard Preparedness staff cleaning up in the University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences after the flood. Four smiling women wearing blue gloves stand in room 013. Photograph was taken in the mid-afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street and Brandeis Street, corner, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood] (The corner of Third Street and Brandeis Avenue by the University Tower Apartments. A man looks out the window of a minivan with the door ajar and water covers the street. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [School of Public Health and Information Sciences, basement, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood] (Desk with aspirin bottle in the basement of the University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences. The desk is surrounded by debris and covered with dirt. Photograph was taken in the mid-afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street before Eastern Parkway intersection, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Third Street flooded near the intersection of Eastern Parkway. A sign reading "Caution Do Not Enter When Flooded" appears in the foreground and flooded Cardinal Shuttle stop shelter can be seen in the background. A trash can floats inside one of the shelters. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street and Eastern Parkway intersection, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded intersection of Third Street and Eastern Parkway. Water level almost reaches the bottom of a bus stop sign. The overpass crossing Eastern Parkway can be seen in the background and an image of the University of Louisville Cardinal Bird mascot painted on the wall of the overpass is partially covered with water. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Eastern Parkway, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Eastern Parkway looking toward the east from the intersection of Third Street. Yellow caution tape stretches across Eastern Parkway keeping traffic from entering the flooded area. Several vehicles turn away from the caution tape. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street, looking north, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded intersection of Third Street and Eastern Parkway. White and orange caution sawhorses float in the water and also stand in the street to restrict access to the flooded area. A line of cars is stopped behind the barriers and a man crosses the street.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Reynolds Building, staircase, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Staircase leading up to Reynolds Building from Third Street is partially submerged by flood water. A sign reading "Rent Here" hangs on the railing. The building was converted into private condominiums called the Reynolds Lofts in 2005. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Fourth Street and Creel Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A black car backs up behind a stop sign to turn around and avoid flooded area. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: Everyone that wasn't stuck was driving around in circles looking for a way out.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street and Winkler Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Third Street facing south toward the intersection with Winkler Street. Three orange and white sawhorses block the road to restrict access to the flooded area of Third Street that extends under the railroad overpass. A police car sits in the street in front of an abandoned A.P. Food Mart gas station. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Creel Avenue and Fifth Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (House on the corner of Creel Avenue and Fifth Street. Flood water entirely covers the street and comes up to the porch of the house. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street near Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Black car driving through flood water on Brook Street near the Houchens Building on the Belknap Campus of the University of Louisville. An empty bike rack is in the foreground and a man stands in the distance with his hand in his pocket. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street near Warnock Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Trees lining Brook Street are reflected in the water which completely covers the street and extends into the parking lot of the Service Complex on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Fourth Street, near Industry Road intersection, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A man wearing yellow rain boots and carrying an umbrella walks through tall grass toward a sign that says, "Do Not Enter When Flooded." Photograph was taken in the mid-afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: People were trapped in the area and were parking their cars and climbing up to the railroad tracks in order to get out.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street near Chemistry Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Light rain falls on flooded Brook Street. A green maintenance vehicle is parked at the curb. The parking lot of the Development and University Relations Building and the silo of the Steam and Chilled Water Plant are in the background. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Tunnel under Eastern Parkway, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A man stands behind a pillar in the Eastern Parkway overpass tunnel that connects Brook Street and Floyd Street, taking a picture. A red car drives through the tunnel in the lane behind the man. Overhead, an inscription reads "CLEARANCE 8'-6"." Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: I'm sure I'm in that guy's picture. This was the tunnel that connects Floyd to Brook under Eastern Parkway. You can't tell in the picture it just looks like a lake.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cardinal Boulevard, looking west, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Light rain falls on flooded Cardinal Boulevard. High waterline reaches almost to the bottom of the overpass crossing the street. Trees growing in the median are submerged to varying degrees.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Car, back seat, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded back seat of car with various items floating in standing water filling the seat. Photograph taken during the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: Here are pictures of the flood...I took each one here on campus and the car in the photos is my car when the water had receded about half way and it also shows how much water I had inside my car when I could finally open my door.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cardinal Boulevard and Brook Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded intersection of Cardinal Boulevard and Brook Street facing the corner of the DuPont Manual High School sports field. Parked cars along the western side of Brook Street are submerged up to their windows. Photograph was taken in the mid afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: Here are pictures of the flood...I took each one here on campus and the car in the photos is my car when the water had receded about half way and it also shows how much water I had inside my car when I could finally open my door.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Railroad tracks between SAC and Floyd Street Parking Garage, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View from second floor of the SAC facing the Floyd Street Parking Garage. Flood water completely covers the railroad tracks between the two structures and extends beyond the fence enclosure on both sides. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Floyd Street Parking Garage and Interstate 65, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Long view shot from the SAC facing Interstate 65. Flooded railroad tracks appear in the foreground and the Floyd Street Parking Garage is in the right background. Interstate 65 can be seen in the distance crowded with traffic. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Student Activities Center parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View across flooded Floyd Street facing east toward the Owsley Brown Frazier Cardinal Park Sportsplex and Interstate 65. Water level reaches the steps leading up to the sports complex. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cardinal Boulevard, looking east, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Light rain falls on flooded Cardinal Boulevard. Trees growing in the median are submerged up to their branches. DuPont Manual High School can be seen in background. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Parking lot between the Houchens Building and the Student Counseling and Health Center is completely underwater. Photograph shows railroad tracks going south parallel to Floyd Street. Tracks are flooded as far as the eye can see. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Crawford Gym and Brook Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Roof of the Student Counseling and Health Center appears in the foreground. The Houchens Building parking lot and Brook Street adjacent to it are totally flooded. Crawford Gym, Lutz Hall, and the Miller Information Technology Center can be seen in the background. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Railroad tracks between SAC and Floyd Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Person walks in flood water along railroad tracks between the Floyd Street Parking Garage and the Houchens Building. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Floyd Street Parking Garage and Student Activities Center, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Long view facing south down the railroad tracks between Floyd Street Parking Garage and the SAC. The sun shines through dark clouds in the distance. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building rear parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Parking lot behind the Houchens Building is flooded and cars stand in water up to their wheel wells. The water has receded from the railroad tracks that run between Floyd Street and Brook Street. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Floyd Street Parking Garage overpass staircase, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Four women walk through flood water and two women stand on concrete stairway leading to the pedestrian overpass over the railroad tracks that run between the Floyd Street Parking Garage and the Houchens Building. Three women wave, one carries an umbrella.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street, facing southwest, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Cars parked askew after the flood water has subsided. Third street was flooded to the extent that cars were floating away from their parking places along the curb. According to the blogger who contributed the photo: "On 3rd street the most impressive part was the cars that had their trunks float and forced their back wheels up onto the curb." Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street and Magnolia Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Dirt marks the waterline of the flood halfway up the body of a white pickup truck. According to the blogger who contributed the photos waterlines like this were visible on many of the vehicles lining the road. Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Unitas Tower and Education building, water being pumped out of building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Water being pumped out of the basement of the University of Louisville College of Education and Human Development pours out of a blue hose that lays on the ramp leading to the building. Water had to be pumped out of the basements of nine buildings on campus as a result of the flooding. Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Unitas Tower parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Water being pumped out of the basement of the Unitas Tower dormitory on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Water had to be pumped out of nine buildings on the University of Louisville Belknap campus. Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building and Brook Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A south-facing view down Brook Street in front of the Houchens Building on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus after the flood water has subsided. Mud covers the street. According to the blogger who contributed the photo: "It was the smell that really was the worst part. This area was under several feet of water with most of it making it into the basement." Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street and Eastern Parkway, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded intersection of Eastern Parkway and Third Street. According to the blogger who contributed the photo: "The traffic lights in the intersection were acting rather crazy. This picture really doesn't convey what was really happening. All of the lights were on flickering really quickly. They would occasionally change behavior, but it was hard to track what it was actually doing." Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street, car lashed to tree, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A red sport utility vehicle (SUV) is tied to a tree with a length of green garden hose. According to the blogger who contributed the photo: "On 3rd street the most impressive part was the cars that had their trunks float and forced their back wheels up onto the curb." Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street and Eastern Parkway, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded intersection of Eastern Parkway and Third Street. Dougherty Hall and Patterson Hall on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus can be seen across the street. A television news truck is parked on Third Street in the distance. Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street and Eastern Parkway, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A partially submerged car sits trapped in the flooded intersection of Third Street and Eastern Parkway under the Southern Railroad overpass. The Reynolds Building, also known as Reynolds Lofts, can be seen in the background. Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street facing south, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Two people cross mud-covered Third Street which is still flooded at the intersection with Eastern Parkway. Orange and white sawhorses warn drivers to avoid the intersection. The Reynolds Building, also known as Reynolds Lofts, rises on the right. Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Eastern Parkway facing east, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Eastern Parkway facing east from the flooded intersection of the parkway and Third Street. An orange and white sawhorse stands in the flood water. Yellow caution tape and orange pylons extend across Eastern Parkway in the distance. Dougherty Hall is on the north side of Eastern Parkway and the Vogt Building is on the south side. Both buildings are part of the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street and Eastern Parkway, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Metropolitan Sewer District (MSD) pump station at the corner of Third Street and Eastern Parkway. Dougherty Hall is on the corner and pylons and yellow caution tape extend across Eastern Parkway in the distance. Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street, facing northwest, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (The Crawford Gym, Schumaker Research Building and Stevenson Hall are visible from across the flooded parking lot between the Houchens Building and the Service Complex. Trees line Brook Street and several cars in the parking lot are flooded up to their windows. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Warnock Street and Brook Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Southwest view across the circular drive at Warnock Street. People stand on the second floor balcony of Lutz Hall watching the flooding. The Miller Information Technology Center (MITC) can be seen in the background. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Crawford Gymnasium, south parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A blue car is partially submerged in the flooded parking lot on the south side of the Crawford Gym. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Sidewalks in front of Schneider Hall and Lutz Hall, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Several people traverse the sidewalks that crisscross the southeast end of the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. A portion of Schneider Hall is visible at the top of the photograph. The flooded parking lot south of Crawford Gym is adjacent to the flooded area. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Service Complex, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (The flooded parking lot of the Service Complex on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. A golf cart and several other vehicles are partially submerged in the flood water. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street facing south, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Third Street facing south toward the Vogt Building and the Southern Railroad overpass. The intersection is still flooded and it appears from tracks in the mud on the street that a car ran up on the sidewalk. Photograph was taken in the evening.) (Photographer Comments: The night after the flood, myself and 3 of my friends walked from our apartment in Old Louisville all the way to Speed School and back to our apartment with me taking pictures along the way. This was later in the day so most of the pictures are of the damage and the beginning of the recovery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Service Complex, facing north, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A man stands on the roof of the Service Complex at the University of Louisville Belknap Campus and looks north toward the Floyd Street Parking Garage. The railroad tracks between the two structures are covered with flood water. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Warnock Street behind Natatorium, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Warnock Street facing east toward Floyd Street is flooded. A van is parked behind the Ralph Wright Natatorium. The Studio Arts/HPES building can be seen across the street. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Photo taken from the roof of the Service Complex at the University of Louisville Belknap Campus facing north toward the Floyd Street Parking Garage. The railroad tracks between the two structures are covered with flood water and a person walks along the tracks. Cars in the parking lot behind the Houchens Building are partially submerged. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Floyd Street and Warnock Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Water bubbles up from a sewer drain at the corner of Floyd Street and Warnock Avenue. A white and red University of Louisville service vehicle drives through the flooded intersection. Photograph was taken in the late morning or early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Railroad tracks behind the Floyd Street Parking Garage, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Railroad tracks behind the Floyd Street Parking Garage are covered with flood water. Cars parked in the adjacent parking lot behind the Houchens Building are submerged in murky water up to their windows. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Floyd Street Parking Garage bus stop, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009.] (Newly constructed bus stop in the Floyd Street Parking Garage on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Flood water covers the sidewalk all the way up to the door of the structure. A group of people stand outside the garage. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Floyd Street, 1900 block, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded corner of Floyd Street facing west toward Unitas Dorm. Floodwater reaches the bottom of the flooded overpass. Photograph was taken in the late morning or early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brandeis Avenue, 200 block, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded corner of Brandeis Avenue and Floyd Street. The Student Activities Center (SAC) is visible in the background. Photograph was taken in the late morning or early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Rescue workers walking toward Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Three rescue workers in yellow and black suits and helmets pull a red inflated boat down flooded Brook Street to the Houchens Building on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Photograph was taken in the late morning or early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Rescue workers arriving at Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Three rescue workers in yellow and black suits and helmets pull a red inflated boat up to the entrance of the Houchens Building on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Photograph was taken in the late morning or early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Rescue workers helping a woman out of the Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Rescue workers help a woman down the steps of the Houchens Building on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Photograph was taken in the late morning or early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Rescue workers outside Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Rescue workers in yellow and black suits escort four women through the flood water on a red inflatable boat behind the Houchens Building on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Photograph was taken in the late morning or early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Law Library, lower level, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Books are stacked along the edge of the carpet in the basement of the Law Library at the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law to keep floodwater at bay. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Law Library, lower level, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (The carpet in the basement of the Law Library at the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law is wet from floodwater. An open door can be seen in the background of the photo showing a room in which the carpet has been pulled up. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Law Library, lower level, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Group study room in the basement of the Law Library at the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law. Furniture is tipped up and carpet has been ripped up due to water damage. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Law Library, lower level, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Ink jet printer cartridge boxes show water damage from the flood in the Law Library at the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Kenwood Arms, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Man looks at flooded parking lot of Kenwood Arms apartments through a chain link fence topped with razor wire.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Kenwood Court, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4. 2009 flood.] (View looking west from Kenwood Court toward First Street. The road is completely covered with water and a fire engine can be seen in the background.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Kenwood Way, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Two cars halfway submerged at the corner of First Street and Kenwood Way. The Americana Community Center (formerly Holy Rosary High School) can be seen in the background.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Rescue workers at intersection of Brook Street and Warnock Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Rescue workers in yellow and black suits escort four women through the flooded intersection of Brook and Warnock on a red inflatable boat. Photograph was taken in the late morning or early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Black car attempts to drive through flooded Brook Street during the rain. The stairway leading up to the Houchens Building is in the foreground. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, interior, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded office in the Houchens Building. Vacuum equipment lays on the floor and a trashcan sits on a desk. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, looking out, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Black car seen through the slats of black blinds covering a window of the Houchens Building. Tree branches hang low over the car. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Student Counseling and Health Center, parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A woman wearing an overcoat and carrying an umbrella appears to be opening the door of a car in the flooded parking lot between the Student Counseling and Health Center and the Houchens Building. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A young woman carrying a backpack and a plastic bag in one hand and smiling stands barefoot in a flooded hallway of the Houchens Building. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, University Postal Service, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A man walks through flooded parking lot outside the post office in the Houchens Building with white plastic bags around his lower legs. Three other people stand outside the covered doorway of the post office. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, down spout, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Water shoots out of a downspout into the parking lot of the Houchens Building. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Floyd Street Parking Garage, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (First level of the Floyd Street Parking Garage facing the Houchens Building. Water covers inner portion of the floor. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cardinal Boulevard, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A view of the railroad bridge crossing Cardinal Boulevard. Flood water reaches the bottom of the bridge. Photograph was taken in the mid-to-late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Railroad bridge over Cardinal Boulevard, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Railroad bridge over Cardinal Boulevard. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [University Club dining room, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Dining room in the University Club. Water covers most of the carpeted floor. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Eastern Parkway and Third Street intersection, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Orange and white sawhorse floats in the flooded intersection of Eastern Parkway and Third Street. "Blue light" emergency kiosk is partially submerged. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Eastern Parkway and Third Street intersection, Louisville, Ky., August 4, 2009 flood.] (View through the underpass at the intersection of Eastern Parkway and Third Street shows that the intersection is completely flooded. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street facing north, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded intersection of Cardinal Boulevard and Brook Street. Water erupts, presumably from a drainage pipe along the street. Dark clouds cover the sky. A car drives south through the flood water on Brook Street. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [College of Business, University of Louisville, basement, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Plumbing crew stands in the doorway of the University of Louisville College of Business basement. They appear to be hauling in the suction device to remove water from the building. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: This Series of pictures shows the north end of the Basement of the business school. The Water line that I marked was 22", We had to crane "Big Blue Bertha" down to the landing in order to get enough suction hose in the water to pump out the basement. The water entered the building thru the access to the tunnel that supplies steam and chilled water to the building. This water came from the Education Building tunnel access. Danny Carter the plumbing Foreman and his crew did an amazing job making the water go away. The damage that was done in the atrium is seen from above. Lots of drywall and furniture. No one got hurt!!!! Yea!) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [College of Business, University of Louisville, south wing atrium, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View of the flooded south wing atrium of the University of Louisville College of Business. Tables, chairs and a copy machine are partially submerged. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: This Series of pictures shows the north end of the Basement of the business school. The Water line that I marked was 22", We had to crane "Big Blue Bertha" down to the landing in order to get enough suction hose in the water to pump out the basement.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Miller Hall, mechanical level, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded mechanical level of Miller Hall dormitory on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. The water line appears to be visible on the posts and water heaters. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: This is the mechanical room at Miller Hall Dorm. There were three Hot water boilers and storage tanks for the sinks and showers for this building that were completely underwater that we had to replace. The cooling pumps were also submerged. Note the air compressor that is floating.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Education building, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Workers clean up fuel oil leaking out of the back of the University of Louisville College of Education and Human Development. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: These are pictures of the Fuel oil cleanup behind Education. Petit Environmental used a huge Vac Truck to Vacuum the oil off of the water. The residual oil was soaked up and put in drums for Disposal. You can see the top of the mechanical room door in the lower level of Education and the R.D.'s air conditioner behind Unitas.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Unitas Tower dormitory, exterior, University of Louisville, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Debris floats around an air conditioning unit outside the Unitas Tower dormitory on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: Unitas Tower Dormitory. The boilers pictured were put in about 3 months prior to the flood. The air handler was completely stripped of insulation and sanitized. All of the insulation in the mechanical room is being stripped and replaced.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Education building, mechanical level, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Debris and furniture are strewn about the floor on the mechanical level of the on the University of Louisville College of Education and Human Development after the flood water has been pumped out. Photograph was taken in the late morning on the day after the flood.) (Photographer Comments: This is what was left after the water was pumped out. All of the motors were replaced, all insulation is being replaced on the piping and the duct-work. Cleaned and sanitized. New Emergency Generator on the way. Elevators...........................not good.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Education building, mechanical level, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Dirt and mud cover piles of tangled tubing, plastic sheeting, cardboard boxes and plastic garbage cans. Photograph was taken in the late morning on the day after the flooding occurred.) (Photographer Comments: This is what was left after the water was pumped out. All of the motors were replaced, all insulation is being replaced on the piping and the duct-work. Cleaned and sanitized. New Emergency Generator on the way. Elevators...........................not good.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Unitas Tower dormitory, mechanical level, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A door opens into a smaller room on the flooded mechanical level of the Unitas Tower dormitory on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Photograph was taken in the late morning the day after the flooding.) (Photographer Comments: Unitas Tower Dormitory. The boilers pictured were put in about 3 months prior to the flood. The air handler was completely stripped of insulation and sanitized. All of the insulation in the mechanical room is being stripped and replaced.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street and Lee Street, corner, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A tractor trailer hauls another vehicle around the corner from Brook to East Lee street during the morning downpour. The gothic-inspired tower of DuPont Manual High School rises in the background. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: I took these photos for our newspaper during the flood, most of them are on Brook St. some are on the train bridge over Cardinal Blvd. The water started rising so quickly over the bridge I had to move. These were taken at about the highest level the water got to.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Education building, mechanical level, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A long hallway on the mechanical level of the on the University of Louisville College of Education and Human Development after the flood water has been pumped out. Debris is piled to one side and the floor is still wet. Photograph was taken in the late morning on the day after the flood.) (Photographer Comments: This is what was left after the water was pumped out. All of the motors were replaced, all insulation is being replaced on the piping and the duct-work. Cleaned and sanitized. New Emergency Generator on the way. Elevators...........................not good.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street and Lee Street, corner, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Two people wearing shorts and rain jackets splash through the flooded intersection of Brook and Lee Street on foot. Photograph was taken during the initial downpour in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: I took these photos for our newspaper during the flood, most of them are on Brook St. some are on the train bridge over Cardinal Blvd. The water started rising so quickly over the bridge I had to move. These were taken at about the highest level the water got to.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street and DuPont Manual High School, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A black car floats in the flood water on Brook Street behind DuPont Manual High School. A tiny bit of the roof of a submerged Mazda Miata protrudes from the water next to the adjacent lamp post. Photograph was taken during the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: I took these photos for our newspaper during the flood, most of them are on Brook St. some are on the train bridge over Cardinal Blvd. The water started rising so quickly over the bridge I had to move. These were taken at about the highest level the water got to.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street, facing north from Cardinal Boulevard, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View facing north up Brook Street soon after the initial downpour stopped. The sun breaks through the clouds over DuPont Manual High School. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: I took these photos for our newspaper during the flood, most of them are on Brook St. some are on the train bridge over Cardinal Blvd. The water started rising so quickly over the bridge I had to move. These were taken at about the highest level the water got to.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Railroad bridge over Cardinal Boulevard, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Long view facing west down Cardinal Boulevard. The water level comes up to the railroad tracks. DuPont Manual High School can be seen in the distance. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: I took these photos for our newspaper during the flood, most of them are on Brook St. some are on the train bridge over Cardinal Blvd. The water started rising so quickly over the bridge I had to move. These were taken at about the highest level the water got to.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Railroad tracks behind University Club, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Water cascades over the railroad tracks running behind the University Club on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. The Student Activities Center (SAC) and clock tower can be seen in the distance. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: I took these photos for our newspaper during the flood, most of them are on Brook St. some are on the train bridge over Cardinal Blvd. The water started rising so quickly over the bridge I had to move. These were taken at about the highest level the water got to.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Railroad bridge over Cardinal Boulevard, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View facing east down Cardinal Boulevard from the railroad bridge that crosses over it. Two banners that say "Courage" and "Passion" and are attached to a light pole are partially submerged. The sign for the Owsley Brown Frazier Cardinal Park Sportsplex can be seen in the distance. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: I took these photos for our newspaper during the flood, most of them are on Brook St. some are on the train bridge over Cardinal Blvd. The water started rising so quickly over the bridge I had to move. These were taken at about the highest level the water got to.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street and Unitas Tower, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View across Brook Street facing the Unitas Tower dormitory on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus. Parked cars along the street are almost totally submerged. A banner featuring an image of cardiologist Roberto Bolli that says "PRIDE" hangs from Unitas Tower. Photograph taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: I took these photos for our newspaper during the flood, most of them are on Brook St. Some are on the train bridge over Cardinal Blvd. The water started rising so quickly over the bridge I had to move. These were taken at about the highest level the water got to.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Belknap Campus, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Area between Life Science Building and Interfaith Center. Sidewalks are completely covered with water. Photograph was taken in the late afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Belknap Campus, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Facing south from the upstairs dining area in the SAC. A man carrying an umbrella walks toward the lower entrance of the SAC. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street and Cardinal Boulevard intersection, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Water gushes up from a drain on Brook Street. Steps leading up to the Unitas Tower dormitory on the University of Louisville Belknap Campus can be seen in the distance. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: I took these photos for our newspaper during the flood, most of them are on Brook St. some are on the train bridge over Cardinal Blvd. The water started rising so quickly over the bridge I had to move. These were taken at about the highest level the water got to.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Railroad tracks near Floyd Street Parking Garage, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Railroad tracks between the Floyd Street Parking Garage and the SAC. Stairs leading up to the Floyd Street entrance of the SAC are in the left middle ground. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Floyd Street from Student Activities Center, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded driveway of the Floyd Street entrance to the SAC. The steps leading up to the Track and Soccer Field can be seen across Floyd Street. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Dr. W.J. Hodge Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Several cars drive through flood water on Dr. W. J. Hodge Street (formerly South 21st Street). Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Dr. W.J. Hodge Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Parked cars along Dr. W.J. Hodge Street (formerly South 21st Street) near the intersection at Magazine Street. Rain falls and the street is completely covered with water. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Railroad tracks near Student Activities Center, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded railroad tracks under the SAC. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Law Library, steps to the basement, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A chair blocks the stairway leading to the basement of the Law Library at the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law which sustained extensive flood damage during the August 4, 2009 flood.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Law Library, basement, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flood damage in the basement of the Law Library at the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law. Wet carpet and drywall were quickly removed to prevent mold from growing.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Law Library, bathroom in the basement, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flood damage in the basement of the Law Library at the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law. Wet carpet and drywall were quickly removed to prevent mold from growing.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Student Counseling and Health Center, parking lot, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Parking lot between Houchens Building and the Student Counseling and Health Center. Rain falls and cars in the lot are partially submerged. Threlkeld Hall can be seen in the background. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Student Activities Center, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (View of the SAC and clock tower from the Floyd Street Parking Garage. Two white service vehicles are parked near the building. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Houchens Building, basement, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded basement of the Houchens Building. A plastic bag, cardboard box, mop bucket and Shop-Vac float in the brown flood water. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Student Activities Center, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (SAC and flooded railroad tracks that run between Floyd Street and Brook Street. A white university service van sits in the parking lot in the foreground and a group of cars are parked under the overpass in the distance. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Belknap Research Building and Threlkeld Hall, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Belknap Research Building (now Shumaker Research Building) and Threlkeld Hall are shown behind the flooded parking lot between the Houchens Building and the Student Counseling and Health Center.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Eastern Parkway and Third Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Eastern Parkway and Third Street intersection during heavy rain. A white truck is parked on Third Street presumably to restrict access to the flooded intersection. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Eastern Parkway, facing east, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Trees frame a view facing east down Eastern Parkway. The water covers the street between Dougherty Hall and Sackett Hall. A person walks east and a black car drives west toward the flooded area of the street. Photograph was taken during the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Eastern Parkway and Third Street intersection, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded intersection of Eastern Parkway and Third Street. Two people stand on the northeast corner of the intersection taking photographs. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Dougherty Hall, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Southeast corner of Dougherty Hall and adjacent parking lot. A flooded portion of Eastern Parkway is in the foreground. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Eastern Parkway, facing east, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Eastern Parkway facing east with W.S. Speed Hall in the background. Flood water reaches up Eastern Parkway to the circular drive in front of the J.B. Speed School of Engineering. Several vehicles drive away from the flooded area. A man in yellow rain gear stands on the sidewalk. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Dougherty Hall and Eastern Parkway, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Eastern Parkway is flooded and water covers the sidewalks on both sides of the street. The water reaches the lower steps in front of Dougherty Hall. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brandeis Avenue and Brook Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded corner of Brandeis Avenue and Brook Street facing the Taco Bell parking lot which is also flooded. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (The white roof of a flooded car stranded in the middle of Brook Street sticks out above the surface of the flood water covering the area near the corner of Brook and Bloom Street. Cars are parked along fence enclosing the DuPont Manual High School sports field. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street and Cardinal Boulevard, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Long view of the intersection of Cardinal Boulevard and Brook Street. Taco Bell and the College Warehouse Bookstore on Brook Street can be seen in the distance. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cardinal Boulevard, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Five people stand on the south sidewalk along Cardinal Boulevard looking at the flooded street. Two of them appear to be photographing or filming the situation. The football field of DuPont Manual High School can be seen across the street. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Third Street, bus stop, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Partially submerged bus stop on the east side of Third Street near the corner of the Eastern Parkway intersection. Tennis courts behind McCandless Hall can be seen in the distance. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cardinal Boulevard, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flooded intersection of Cardinal Boulevard and Brook Street seen from the south sidewalk along Cardinal. Parked cars along Brook Street are partially submerged. The football field of DuPont Manual High School can be seen across the street. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cardinal Boulevard, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Water bubbles up on flooded Cardinal Boulevard presumably from overloaded underground drainage system. A yellow sign at the side of the road reads "Caution Do Not Enter When Flooded." Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brook Street and Cardinal Boulevard, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Three people stand in the grass facing the flooded intersection of Brook Street and Cardinal Boulevard. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Unitas Tower and College of Education and Human Development, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Flood water behind Unitas Tower with visible pool of diesel fuel along the edge of the flooded area. Diesel fuel leaked from machinery in the basement of the adjacent College of Education and Human Development. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Montana Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Six people stand on the porch of a house on Montana Avenue smiling. Water surrounds the house as far as the eye can see. Photograph was taken in the early afternoon.) (Photographer Comments: My favorite photo is of us with another family on our front porch and it's particularly interesting given the circumstances. The water surrounds our house and continues to rise, but by that time, we were all exhausted and could only laugh about the situation. A few hours before that photo, Brennan, Robby and I saved the family (the three others on the porch with us) whose car had stalled because they drove into the water. We had to push their car up the street away from the water and get them safely out of the flooding car. They took shelter in our house drying up, eating lunch with us and waiting for the storm to pass.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Seventh Street and Eighth Street, alley between, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A white car drives through a flooded area of the alley between Seventh Street and Eighth Street. Photograph was taken during the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Seventh Street, facing south, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Cars drive north toward the flooded intersection of Seventh Street and York Street. Downtown Post Office is on the corner of the two streets. Photograph was taken during the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Eighth Street, facing south, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A person walks down the sidewalk of Eighth Street carrying an open umbrella. Cars drive down the flooded street. A building with the words "Lichtefeld, Inc." is in the distance. Photograph was taken in the late morning.) (Photographer Comments: ) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Dental School, basement, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Workers attempt to deal with incoming flood water in the basement of the University of Louisville School of Dentistry. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: Attached are a few images I made during the storm at the School of Dentistry building on August 4th. ...The most dramatic was the five-foot geyser from a service pipe in the parking lot between the dental school and the University Hospital parking garage...Second was the aftermath of sewage erupting from a first floor men's room on the SW side of the building...There was water in the basement on the south side of the school but I couldn't see where it came in.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Dental School, bathroom, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (Bathroom sink in a first floor men's room in the University of Louisville School of Dentistry. Sewage debris covers sink in the first floor men's room. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: Attached are a few images I made during the storm at the School of Dentistry building on August 4th. The most dramatic was the five-foot geyser from a service pipe in the parking lot between the dental school and the University Hospital parking garage. Second was the aftermath of sewage erupting from a first floor men's room on the SW side of the building. There was water in the basement on the south side of the school but I couldn't see where it came in.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Dental School, Louisville, Kentucky, August 4, 2009 flood.] (A geyser of water shoots out of the ground in the parking lot between the University of Louisville School of Dentistry and University Hospital. Photograph was taken in the mid-morning.) (Photographer Comments: Attached are a few images I made during the storm at the School of Dentistry building on August 4th. The most dramatic was the five-foot geyser from a service pipe in the parking lot between the dental school and the University Hospital parking garage. Second was the aftermath of sewage erupting from a first floor men's room on the SW side of the building. There was water in the basement on the south side of the school but I couldn't see where it came in.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet with stone marker, France, 1917.] (Andre Jeunet stands next to a large stone marker which reads in part "Vive la France" (Long live France) and "Doubs". It is unclear whether the marker is located near Doubs, France or commemorating someone from Doubs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers reading Paris newspaper, circa 1916.] (Four soldiers read Paris newspapers as they stand on a dirt road or parking area during World War I. Insignia on one collar indicates they are part of the 139e Regiment d'Infanterie. Wooden barn, other buildings, and army vehicles are in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Girl, France, circa 1916.] (Girl, wearing a long-sleeved dress and bows in her hair, stands in a grass clearing during World War I. Her face, legs and clothes are dirty and she is holding a stick in her right hand.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Women on dirt road, circa 1917.] (Five women, wearing head scarves, pause on a tree-lined dirt road during World War I. They are turned toward the photographer and smiling. One is carrying a bundle that may be laundry.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers relaxing, Balkans, 1918.] (Soldiers from France's 34e Colonial Regiment relax with a bottle of champagne in front of tents in a hillside camp, reportedly near Monastir in the Balkans in July, 1918.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Woman and child, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Balkan woman, wearing a hijab or Islamic veil, sits on the ground, leaning against a brick wall, with an infant sitting next to her. The child, dressed in white, appears to be chewing on something that may be a rag doll. Taken during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French army trucks, circa 1916.] (French soldiers refill radiators of four army convoy trucks during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier Godet, France, circa 1916.] (Godet, close friend of photographer Andre Jeunet, reclines on the grass next to an idle wooden plow. He is wearing the uniform of France's 139e Regiment d'Infanterie.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers in trench above village on river, Europe, circa 1917.] (Soldiers in a hillside trench overlooking a village and river during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Mountain trench, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldier, sitting under a small shelter at the end of a mountain trench, and nearby mountaintops as seen over the edge of the trench. Believed to be near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1918.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet reading, circa 1916.] (Andre Jeunet sits on the edge of a small wooden bed, or cot, reading a newspaper during World War I. He appears to be in a low-ceiling room, attic, or loft.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Dugout entrance in trench, circa 1917.] (Entrance to a dugout at the end of a trench during World War I. A canvas covering is on the ground above the entrance and other items hang from the walls.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers in mountains, circa 1917.] (French soldiers descend a rocky path toward a makeshift shelter constructed on a mountainside during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View from trench, Balkan mountains, 1918.] (Mountains as seen from the edge of a trench near Monastir, Albania during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Man washing feet in Balkan military camp, circa 1918.] (Man washing his feet with water from a metal bucket in a military camp during World War I. He has a plaid cloth tied around his head and is standing near a brick building. Soldiers are standing in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Steam engine and train, France, circa 1916.] (Steam engine pulling a train in France during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Six women, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Six veiled women walk down a tree-lined dirt road next to a river during World War I. One is carrying a sawhorse, another has a large board on her head, and others are holding various bundles and baskets. They appear to be heading toward a small village down the road. Laundry hangs between the trees.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, Adriatic Sea, 1917.] (Andre Jeunet, wearing a beret, sits in or near a small rowboat at the edge of the Adriatic Sea. Two men are in the boat.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier brushing teeth, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldier brushing his teeth as he stands with one foot in a rushing stream and the other on a large rock along the creek bed.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier in trench, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldier working in a trench during World War I. At the top of the trench is a small wooden sign that reads "M-A-G". He is believed to be a member of France's 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Woman bent over mountain stream, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Barefoot woman bends over a basket, most likely containing laundry, at the edge of a mountain brook. Small streams of water are cascading down a stone wall into the water near her. Picture was taken during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Battlefield, France, 1917.] (Fallen fence posts, barbed wire fencing, and rocky debris on a field near Côte 304 outside Verdun, France in August, 1917.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Shells explosions, France, circa 1915.] (Smoke plumes rise from three or four exploding artillery shells. Landscape and foliage are similar to other pictures in this collection taken during the photographer's army training exercises in Autun, France in 1915.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Ox carts of wood, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Ox carts pull loads of wood down a tree-lined road next to a river during World War I. Two men stand at the side of the road holding implements that were most likely used to prod the oxen.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet in trench near Monastir, 1918.] (French soldier Andre Jeunet poses outside a dugout in the mountains near Monastir, Albania during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet in dugout, Balkans, 1918.] (French soldier Andre Jeunet, chin in hand, looks out from a dugout. Reportedly in Cerna area near Monastir in the Balkans.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, Jougne, France, 1917.] (Self-portrait of Andre Jeunet taken from a reflection in large mirror. He is sitting on a table, wearing his army uniform. According to Jeunet's family, Andre was 21 years old and the photograph was taken while he was on leave in Jougne, France.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier Godet, Autun, France, 1915.] (Godet, a French soldier and close friend of the photographer's, sits in front of a dark cloth background. He appears to be wearing his uniform pants, shirt, and suspenders, and holding a book or leather writing pad. Taken during training in Autun, France in 1915.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Balkan man, child and mule, circa 1918.] (Balkan man, wearing a fez, pulls a large striped cloth over baskets on the back of a donkey, or mule, stopped at the side of a dirt road in a Balkan village, or military camp, during World War I. A young boy is at his side, and soldiers can be seen on the right of the road. Four children and other structures are across a small ditch.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Shepherd and sheep, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Shepherd with sheep in a large field near a river in the Balkans during World War I. Other men, perhaps soldiers, are in the background and a village, or military camp, appears to be just across the river.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Donkeys grazing on hill, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Donkeys, with blankets on their backs, graze on a hillside overlooking a small settlement on a river in the Balkans during World War I. The settlement, which may be a military camp, includes tents, teepees, and huts.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Mule and ox pulling lumber wagon, circa 1917.] (Mule and ox pull a wagon loaded with lumber down a small road during World War I. A stone fence is next to the road.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Boys swimming, circa 1917.] (Three young boys play in a stream while two boys watch from the rocky bank of the river or creek.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Steam engine, 1917.] (Steam engine sitting on railroad tracks. The top of a one-story building, perhaps an army barracks, is on the far side of the engine.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier, Balkan Mountains, circa 1918.] (French soldier leans against a rocky wall high on a mountainside in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Men and children, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Men and children stand and crouch near a large stone wall and building in the Balkans during World War I. A soldier's helmet can be seen just behind them and a large opening in the wall appears to lead to a road with more buildings and people.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Balkan soldier, circa 1918.] (Young man, probably a soldier, in a military camp during World War I. He is wearing a turban and standing in front of a directional sign that points to the "cantine" where there is drinkable water ("eau potable").) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Military camp gathering, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Allied soldiers, in assorted uniforms, are gathered in a large circle in a Balkan military camp during World War I. Some appear to be smiling and one man in the middle may be holding a package. Numerous buildings, probably barracks, are in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Woman hanging laundry, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Woman, wearing a hijab or Islamic veil, stands on a wooden box to hang laundry on a line outside a brick house. Another woman, also wearing a hijab, looks out from the doorway. Picture was taken in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View from mountain trench, Balkans, 1918.] (Mountaintops as seen from a trench near Monastir, Albania during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Young men, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Two young men, probably soldiers, in the Balkans during World War I. They are wearing turbans and jackets as they stand and lean again against a wall in a military camp.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Wooden mule cart, circa 1917.] (Mule pulling people in a wooden cart down a dirt road near several buildings during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Mountain trenches ,Europe, circa 1917.] (Distant view of a network of paths, trenches, barbed wire entanglements, and dugouts on a mountaintop during World War I. Taken in either northeastern France or the Balkans.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Allied soldiers playing cards and checkers, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldiers sit at a narrow table playing cards and checkers in a rocky ravine or trench in the Balkans during World War I. They are believed to be members of the 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [City street, France, circa 1917.] (Woman, walking away from the camera down a city sidewalk, looks to the side as if reading a window sign. Large buildings and lamp posts line the city street in France during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Boys swimming, World War I.] (Three young boys play in a stream while two boys watch from the rocky bank of the river or creek.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Mountain trenches, Europe, circa 1917.] (Distant view of a network of dugouts, trenches, paths and barbed wire entanglements above the tree line on a mountainside during World War I. Taken in either northeastern France or the Balkans.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier, Balkan Mountains, circa 1918.] (French soldier stands above the roof of a shelter high on a mountainside in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers on train, circa 1916.] (French soldiers stand in and near boxcars on a train paused under telephone lines in France during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Farmer, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Farmer, wearing a turban and traditional Balkan attire, pauses with his plow and team of oxen in a field in the Balkan mountains during World War I. A soldier can be seen in the background and a young girl is at the far right of the photograph.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Children, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Group of Balkan children, wearing heavy clothing, stand in a large flat area, perhaps a playground or schoolyard during World War I. Small bungalows, or houses, are in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier's items in dugout, circa 1917.] (A drawing, soldier's helmet, satchel, and other belongings sit on a dirt ledge in a small dugout at the end of a trench during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Small boy in cemetery, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Young boy stands next to a large stone inside a small overgrown cemetery surrounded by a high stone wall. A multi-story house with a tile roof can be seen on the other side of the wall. Taken during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers on mountain path, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Long line of soldiers walking single file on a mountain path during World War I. Possibly members of the 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Women and French colonial soldiers in Balkan village, circa 1918.] (Balkan women, wearing dark veils, are accompanied by children as they walk toward unidentified buildings in a village. Soldiers are standing behind the women and at the side of the road and almost everyone is facing in the direction the women are heading. Soldiers are believed to be members of France's 34e Colonial Regiment stationed in the Cerna Mountains in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Stone bridge over stream with dead cow, circa 1917.] (Stone bridge over a small river or stream surrounded by trees. A soldier is standing on one end of the bridge and a dead animal that appears to be a cow is floating in the water. Several other animals are at the edge of the water.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Women and farm harvest, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Two women, wearing scarves or hijabs, sit on the ground in front of a wooden structure full of harvested plants. The women appear to be removing produce or grain, perhaps corn, from stalks. Picture was taken in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier at dugout entrance, circa 1917.] (Soldier, in full uniform, sits outside dugout entrance in a trench during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Two men, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Two men, wearing sweaters and hats, work on a rocky hillside in the Balkans during World War I. One is smoking a pipe and both appear to be shaking or rubbing something in their hands.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier with kitten, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldier sitting with kitten on large rock in a support trench during World War I. Canteen, helmet, pick and other tools hang from, and rest against, the rock wall behind him. He is believed to be a member of France's 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers prepare weapons in trench, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldiers repair, or conduct standard maintenance on, a machine gun in a rock-lined support trench during World War I. The soldiers are believed to be members of France's 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Mountain view, Europe, circa 1917.] (Distant view of mountains, taken in either northeastern France or the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Pack horses, circa 1917.] (Horse or mule, carrying a full load of knapsacks, walks away from the camera across a field. Shadows indicate he is following another horse or mule.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Children with earthenware jugs, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Two small boys kneel on the ground with their hands on three earthenware jugs, perhaps resting before carrying the jugs to another location. Mountains, other children, a soldier and a stone wall with a wooden gate are behind them. Picture was taken in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Men at Balkan military camp, circa 1918.] (Four men, wearing coats and turbans, sit and stand under two trees. Other men, who are most likely French soldiers, can be seen in the background near what appears to be a large barn or barracks in a military camp during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Man, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Man, probably a farmer, wearing a turban and traditional Balkan attire, stands next to a pile of rocks and waist-high plants in a field during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cows grazing, France, circa 1916.] (Two cows graze in a field in France during World War I. Trees, people, fences and a large barn are in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers in Balkan town, circa 1918.] (French soldiers approach man with yoke of oxen on cobblestone road in a town that is believed to be in the Balkans. The soldiers are probably part of France's 34e Colonial Regiment.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier talking with man, Balkans, circa 1918.] (French soldier and a Balkan civilian, standing in a village or military camp, use their hands as they attempt to communicate during World War I. Other soldiers and another civilian watch.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers in trench, circa 1917.] (French soldier approaches fellow soldiers standing in a ravine during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier digging a trench, circa 1916.] (French soldier shovels dirt from a trench, probably in northeastern France, during World War I. He has a cigarette in his mouth and his jacket is lying on the ground above his head.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [France's 139e Regiment d'Infanterie in field, circa 1916.] (Soldiers from France's 139e Regiment d'Infanterie sit and stand in a field in France during World War I. Rifles are arranged next to them in a conical formation resembling a small tepee.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French army cooks, circa 1915.] (Three World War I French army cooks stand next to large pot sitting over a fire. Behind them are firewood supplies, an army truck and a frame building.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers in trench above village on river, Europe, circa 1917.] (Soldiers in a trench on a hillside overlooking a river and village during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Boys with soldiers, circa 1916.] (Two boys pose with World War I soldiers who are standing and sitting in an open boxcar door on a stopped train.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers work on weapons in trench, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Three soldiers in a support trench work to repair or maintain weapons during World War I. Two sit under a canvas awning in the rock-lined trench. They are believed to be members of France's 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers in trench, circa 1917.] (Soldiers working in a large trench during World War I. Two rolls of barbed wire are in the foreground.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Men at Balkan military camp, circa 1918.] (Seven men, wearing coats and turbans, sit and stand in a yard next to a large one story building in a military camp during in World War I. A soldier, who is most likely French, is in the background. The other men are probably Balkan soldiers.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, Caluire-et-Cuire, France, 1919.] (Self-portrait of Andre Jeunet sitting in a wooden chair in front of a wall with floral wallpaper. Believed to have been taken in his aunt's home in Caluire near Lyon, France in July 1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers sitting on cots, France, circa 1916.] (Three soldiers sit on small wooden beds, or cots, in a low-ceilinged room during World War I. Insignia on the jacket collar of the man on the left, who is also in image ULPA 2004.003.006E, indicate he is in France's 139e Regiment d'Infanterie and his black armband signifies the recent death of a family member. Clothing hangs from the rafters above them and a rifle is propped against one wall.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, deserted house, circa 1916.] (Andre Jeunet, in his World War I Army uniform, stands in the door of a small deserted building that is surrounded by overgrown plants. Believed to be in France.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Tree grove, circa 1917.] (Trees with tall, thin trunks as seen from the ground in a wooded area.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Women, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Group of Balkan women, wearing dark hijabs or Islamic veils, stand outdoors with their backs to the camera. A tiled roof is visible behind them.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cooking in French army camp, circa 1916.] (World War I French army cooks prepare a meal using their mobile kitchen. Other trucks, large pots, firewood, utensils and supplies surround a small brick building, probably in northeastern France.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Young man and beagle on house lawn, circa 1916.] (Young man and a beagle lie on the lawn of a large house during World War I. There appears to be a second young man or boy behind the dog.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Two French soldiers on field, circa 1916.] (Two soldiers, apparently on watch duty, sit near large boulders in a field during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Young girl, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Young barefoot girl, wearing patched clothing with holes, stands beside a wooden building with a large "18" painted on the side. Balkan soldier, wearing a fez, is partially visible on the right edge of the photograph, which was taken during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers enjoy water break on train ride, circa 1916.] (French soldiers, being transported by train, take advantage of a brief stop to freshen up and cool off under a small shower of water during World War I. Soldiers are believed to be with the 139e Regiment d'Infanterie.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Senegalese soldier, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldier, believed to be from Senegal, sitting outdoors in a military camp in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Farmer, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Farmer, wearing a turban, attempts to plow land in a mountain valley with a team of oxen during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers, circa 1917.] (Andre Jeunet, sitting on a large rock, poses with five fellow soldiers at the side of a small mountain road during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Woman bent over mountain stream, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Woman, standing in a shallow mountain stream, is stooped over and possibly doing laundry because a cloth item appears to be hanging on nearby plants. Stone buildings are partially visible in the background. Picture was taken in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Three girls, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Three small girls, barefoot and dressed in old, worn dresses, grin as they stand under a clothesline near a brick wall in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers work on weapons or ammunition in trench, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Six soldiers work intently at a table under a canvas awning in a support trench during World War I. Five are smoking pipes and appear to be working on weapon parts or other types of instruments. They are believed to be members of France's 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, Autun, France, 1915.] (Self-portrait of Andre Jeunet, wearing striped shirt and suspenders, taken in Autun, France between May and October, 1915.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Rowboat, Adriatic Sea, circa 1917.] (Three men, who appear to be working with a fishing net, sit in a small rowboat at the edge of the Adriatic Sea. Large cruiser is visible in the distant background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier in communication trench, circa 1917.] (French soldier, wearing military coat and helmet, stands in a communication trench that is lined with wire mesh and cables, and covered with a few leaves and branches. Taken during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Farmer, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Bearded farmer, wearing a turban and traditional Balkan attire, stands in a field of young plants, probably corn, during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, Caluire-et-Cuire, France, 1919.] (Self-portrait of Andre Jeunet taken in wardrobe door mirror in his aunt's home in Caluire near Lyon in July, 1919. He is wearing his French army uniform and sitting at a table with his hand on his camera. Several photographs are on the table.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers construct barbed wire entanglements in Balkans, circa 1918.] (Four soldiers, believed to be with France's 34e Colonial Regiment, work with barbed wire on a high hillside in the Balkans, near Monastir, Albania.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Balkan soldier, circa 1918.] (Close-up of young man, probably a soldier, wearing a turban in a military camp in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View from mountain trench, Balkans, 1918.] (Mountains and valleys as seen from inside a mountain trench near Monastir, Albania during World War I. Rocks and a few sandbags line the walls of the trench.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, Albania, 1918.] (French soldier Andre Jeunet leans against a rock and dirt wall to pose for a photograph in the mountains near Monastir, Albania in June, 1918. A roll of barbed wire is on the ground near his feet.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cooking in French military camp, circa 1916.] (French soldier ladles liquid into a steaming cook pot, which is one of four sitting next to a brick building, in a military camp during World War I. Other soldiers, most likely from the 139e Regiment d'Infanterie, stand and sit nearby.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, circa 1916.] (Andre Jeunet reads a book while reclining on straw on the floor of what appears to be the loft in a wooden barn. His military uniform and other items hang on rafters above him.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Children, circa 1917.] (Small boy and girl stand in a clearing next to trees during World War I. Boy is barefoot and both are wearing old, dirty clothing.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet reading outdoors, France, circa 1916.] (Andre Jeunet, in military attire, sits on grass next to an idle wooden plow reading from a well-worn book or journal during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers writing letters, circa 1915.] (Andre Jeunet's close friend, Godet, and another soldier sit in a classroom writing letters home. The number of their military unit, France's 139e Regiment d'Infanterie, is clearly visible on the collar of Godet's uniform. The second soldier, also in image ULPA 2004.003.020A, is wearing a black armband signifying a recent death in his family. Probably taken during training in Autun, France in 1915.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers, circa 1917.] (Soldier appears to be using water from a canteen to wash, or cool off, as two other soldiers stand nearby at the bottom of a hill during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Barn or farmhouse, France, circa 1916.] (Barn or farmhouse in France. Potted plants sit on a shelf near the door, and garden tools and other items hang on, and lean against, the outer walls.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier Godet, France, circa 1916.] (Godet, Andre Jeunet's close friend and fellow soldier, reclines on the grass next to an idle wooden plow. He is wearing the uniform of France's 139e Regiment d'Infanterie and has his hand on a journal or writing pad.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier holding dog, circa 1917.] (Soldier stands with a small dog or puppy under his arm during World War I. Behind him, soldiers are preparing or eating food at a temporary camp located on a hillside or in a trench.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [City street, France, circa 1917.] (Horse-drawn wagons sit at a street curb in a large city in France during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Creek or brook, circa 1917.] (Water flows in a stream surrounded by tall trees. Buildings are partially visible upstream.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Women on city park bench, France, circa 1917.] (Two elderly women, dressed in dark clothing, converse on a park bench in a French city during World War I. A store is on the first level of the building behind them.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French army convoy, 1917.] (Andre Jeunet and fellow soldiers in a truck convoy pause at the side of a road on their way to Verdun in August 1917. Insignia on jackets indicate they were part of France's 139e Regiment d'Infanterie. Cable in Jeunet's right hand was probably connected to the camera.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cooking for the French army, circa 1916.] (French soldier stirs contents of a large pot sitting on the ground in front of a large brick building. Other soldiers are in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier eating in front of tent, France, circa 1916.] (Soldier, sitting crossed-legged in front of a tent, is eating from a metal bowl. The soldier, also in images 2004.003.018A and 2004.003.027B, is a member of France's 139e Regiment d'Infanterie.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View from trench, 1917.] (Horizon as seen from a trench in France during World War I. May have been at Côte 304 near Verdun.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Object among grass and trees, circa 1917.] (Unidentified object sitting on the ground, surrounded by tall grass and trees.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers in war-damaged town, Balkans, circa 1918.] (French soldiers walking in the streets of a town that appears to have been damaged during World War I and is believed to be in the Balkans.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier digging trench, circa 1916.] (French soldier uses a pick to dig a trench or dugout, probably in northeastern France, during World War I. He has a cigarette in his mouth and his jacket is lying on the ground above his head.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers cooking, circa 1916.] (Godet, left, friend of photographer Andre Jeunet watches two French soldiers from the 139e Regiment d'Infanterie prepare a meal on the banks of a stream or river. One is tending the fire. The other, smoking a pipe, is looking down at a dog. They are believed to be in northeastern France.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Woman and children in stream, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Woman, wearing a scarf, is standing in a small stream next to a stone wall. Three children are also standing in and alongside the water. The woman appears to be wringing out laundry. Two of the children are also in another image in this collection (ULPA 2004.003.016E).) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Man and pack horses, circa 1917.] (Lone man, perhaps a soldier, leads two horses or mules loaded with knapsacks and other supplies across rocky mountain terrain during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier rinsing toothbrush, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldier rinses his toothbrush in a rushing stream during World War I. Fellow soldiers are on the banks of the stream.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers, artillery and horses on field, circa 1917.] (French soldiers sit and stand in a field with their artillery and horses during World War I. One of two soldiers in the foreground appears to be taking his left shoe off, or putting it on, and the other is reaching into a bag or kit.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers and their gear, circa 1917.] (French soldier, in full uniform, holding his weapons and other gear. Two other soldiers are nearby and disassembled machine guns are on the ground.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers loading mobile kitchen, France, circa 1916.] (French soldiers load supplies onto a portable kitchen outside a large barn in France during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers during break in train ride, circa 1916.] (Two French soldiers appear to be eating while sitting on train tracks during World War I. Other soldiers stand and climb on the train that is stopped behind them.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers on deck of French cruiser Chateau-Renault, 1917.] (Soldiers on deck of French cruiser Chateau-Renault at the end of their sail from Italy to Itea, Greece in 1917. According to photographer's papers, the convoy was attacked by a submarine and one ship was sunk as they crossed the Adriatic Sea at night.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Adriatic Sea, 1917.] (Sea gulls fly near ship on the Adriatic Sea.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers building stone wall, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldiers from France's 34e Colonial Regiment build a stone wall near their hillside camp, believed to be in the Balkans in 1918 or 1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet writing, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Andre Jeunet, wearing his helmet and other army attire, is writing at a little table outdoors in the Balkan mountains. Papers and a small bottle sit on the table.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Allied soldiers, European mountains, circa 1917.] (Allied soldiers outside a makeshift shelter constructed on a mountainside during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers on mountain path, circa 1917.] (Soldiers walk away from the camera along a rocky, narrow mountain path during World War I. The last soldier in line, the only one without a helmet, turns toward the photographer.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Man in front of tent, circa 1917.] (Young man, holding a cane and wearing a beret, sits outside a tattered tent near a wooded area during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Coastline, Adriatic Sea, 1917.] (Shores of the Adriatic Sea as seen from French cruiser Chateau-Renault.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet reading, France, 1917.] (Andre Jeunet reads as he reclines on the grass under a tree in France during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier Godet, France, circa 1916.] (Godet, Andre Jeunet's close friend and fellow soldier, is wearing the uniform of France's 139e Regiment d'Infanterie as he sits at a wooden table outdoors. His canteen, glasses and bowls are on the table and a tall fence, or wall of a wooden building, is behind him.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier Godet, Autun, France, 1915.] (Godet, a French soldier and close friend of photographer Andre Jeunet, laughs as he buttons his shirt. He appears to be wearing uniform pants, shirt, and suspenders as he sits in front of a dark cloth background. Taken during military training in Autun, France in 1915.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier at small desk on hillside, circa 1917.] (Soldier is bent over, and appears to be working at, a small makeshift table camouflaged on the side of a hill during World War I. Taken in either northeastern France or the Balkans.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Convoy of warships, Adriatic Sea, 1917.] (Distant view of a convoy of warships on the Adriatic Sea. According to photographer's papers, the convoy was attacked by a submarine and one ship was sunk as they crossed the Adriatic at night during the summer of 1917.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers on mountain path, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldiers, carrying canteens, picks, shovels, and other tools, walk single file along a mountain path during World War I. One man, slightly off the path, has his hands on his head, but it is unclear as to whether he is a prisoner or simply adjusting his hat.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Senegalese soldier, Balkan Mountains, circa 1918.] (French colonial soldier, believed to be from Senegal, stands near a tent in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Shrapnel on edge of trench, 1918.] (Piece of shrapnel lies on upper edge of a trench overlooking a valley near Monastir, Albania during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Woman and child near clotheslines, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Balkan woman, wearing a dark scarf and long dress, holds a bundled child on her hip. Laundry is drying on clotheslines behind her and another woman stands behind the laundry. Taken during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers shaving, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldier helps a fellow soldier shave in a rock-lined support trench during World War I. They are believed to be members of France's 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers relaxing, Balkans, 1918.] (Andre Jeunet and other soldiers from France's 34e Colonial Regiment relax in a hillside camp, reportedly near Monastir in the Balkans in July, 1918. A bottle of champagne is sitting on the ground near Jeunet.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier digging a trench, circa 1916.] (French soldier stands and tosses dirt from his shovel as he digs a trench, probably in northeastern France, during World War I. He has a cigarette in his mouth and his jacket is lying on the ground to his left.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Little girl, France, circa 1916.] (Little girl is pulling on her left shoe as she sits on concrete stoop in an open doorway. The girl, also in image ULPA 2004.003.017C, is wearing a patterned dress and a light-colored bow in her hair.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers work at table in trench, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Six soldiers work intently at a table under a canvas awning in a support trench during World War I. Five are smoking pipes and they appear to be working on weapon parts or other instruments. They are believed to be members of France's 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Allied soldiers with Balkan children, circa 1918.] (One French soldier and three Balkan soldiers pause with several children near a stone wall on a dirt road on a hillside in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Fatally wounded soldier, Côte 304, France, 1917.] (The body of a French soldier, and comrade of the photographer, is slumped in a trench at Côte 304 near Verdun in August 1917. He was killed by a small burst of shrapnel in his back.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, Brebant, France, 1917.] (Andre Jeunet, wearing his helmet and other army attire, stands near tall plants at the edge of a wooded area in Brebant, Haute-Marne, France during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet on back of railroad car, 1917.] (Andre Jeunet, wearing corduroy pants, a jacket and beret, sits on the back of a railroad car. Another train and more railroad tracks are in the background. Picture was taken while he was on military leave in Doubs, France in September, 1917.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, Albania, 1918.] (French soldier Andre Jeunet, sitting on a wooden box and sandbags piled on a steep incline, takes a break from digging a trench near Monastir, Albania during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier, circa 1915.] (Soldier, in full uniform, appears to be preparing to throw a small white rock. The terrain is similar to other photographs taken when the photographer was in military training in Autun, France in 1915.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, Jougne, France, 1917.] (Self-portrait of Andre Jeunet taken from a reflection in a large wardrobe mirror. He is wearing civilian clothes and sitting at a table with his hand on the camera. According to Jeunet's family, Andre was 21 years old and the photograph was taken while he was on leave in Jougne, France.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier Godet reading letter, Autun, France, 1915.] (Godet, a French soldier and close friend of photographer Andre Jeunet, sits reading a letter. Insignia for the 139e Regiment d'Infanterie is clearly visible on the collar of his uniform.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, France, 1917.] (Andre Jeunet, in soldier's attire, sits in the grass under a tree. According to his family, this picture was taken after he had ridden three hours in a rough, dusty convoy to Côte 304 near Verdun in August, 1917.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Tall trees, circa 1917.] (Trunks of tall trees in the woods. Taken in France or the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Andre Jeunet, Autun, France, 1915.] (Self-portrait of Andre Jeunet in profile, wearing striped shirt and suspenders. According to his family, the photograph was taken in Verdun, France in August, 1917.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier in dugout, circa 1917.] (Soldier sleeping, or resting, in a dugout in a trench during World War I. Canteen and other items hang on the trench walls outside the dugout.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers in support trench, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldiers pause outside a dugout in a support trench that is lined with sandbags during World War I. They are believed to be members of France's 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier in military camp, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldier, wearing a coat and fez, or toque style hat, sits on the ground outside a building in a military camp in the Balkans during World War I. A barefoot soldier is partially visible next to him.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier's gear in trench, circa 1917.] (Soldier's coat, bedroll, satchel and other equipment are propped against a small dirt and rock wall outside a dugout in a trench during World War I. Sign on top of wall reads "C. M. Bureau.") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Shrapnel on soldier's cap, circa 1917.] (Large piece of shrapnel on top of a soldier's cap sitting next to a helmet on a rock in a trench during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Senegalese soldier, Balkan mountains, circa 1918.] (French Colonial soldier, believed to be from Senegal, stands in front of tents or canvas shelters on a mountainside in the Balkans during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers at table in trench, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldiers sit at a narrow table under a canvas awning in a rock-lined support trench during World War I. They are believed to be members of France's 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French cruiser Chateau-Renault, Adriatic Sea, 1917.] (Men work near the mast and pilothouse of the French cruiser Chateau-Renault which carried soldiers from Italy to Itea, Greece during World War I. According to photographer's papers, the convoy was attacked by a submarine and one ship was sunk as they crossed the Adriatic at night.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French cruiser Chateau-Renault, Adriatic Sea, 1917.] (Back of a soldier's head and the mast, pilothouse, and smokestack, or funnel, of French cruiser Chateau-Renault which carried soldiers from Italy to Itea, Greece during World War I. According to photographer's papers, the convoy was attacked by a submarine and one ship was sunk as they crossed the Adriatic at night.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cabin on stream in woods, circa 1917.] (Stream in a heavily forested area. A small wooden house or cabin is partially visible through the trees. Taken during World War I, probably in France or the Balkans.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier in trench, 1918.] (French soldier digs, or does other work, in trench near Monastir, Albania during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers take water break on train ride, circa 1916.] (French soldiers, being transported by train, take advantage of a brief stop to freshen up and cool off under an outdoor shower or water pipe during World War I. Soldiers are probably with the 139e Regiment d'Infanterie.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers, circa 1917.] (Soldiers line up outside a makeshift shelter built on the side of a mountain during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Balkan town, circa 1918.] (Large town, or village, in a valley as seen from a hillside. Rounded mosque domes and minarets are visible, suggesting the town is in the Balkans, where the photographer served with France's 34e Colonial Regiment in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Mountain trenches, Europe, circa 1917.] (Distant view of a network of dugouts, trenches, paths and barbed wire entanglements above the tree line on a mountainside during World War I. Taken in either northeastern France or the Balkans.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier with children, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Comrade of Andre Jeunet with village children in the Balkans. Soldier is smoking a cigarette as he and the children sit and stand in front of a rock wall. Insignia on the soldier's collar is believed to represent France's 34e Colonial Regiment.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Adriatic Sea, 1917.] (Sea gulls fly near ship on the Adriatic Sea.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Girl walking on dirt road, circa 1917.] (Young girl with long hair walks away, down a tree-lined dirt road during World War I. She is wearing a dress and carrying something in her right hand. Another child is standing on the right-hand side of the road.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Children and stream, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Three children stand and stoop near a creek in the Balkans during World War I. Two boys are on a flat stone, or piece of wood, spanning the small stream. One is wearing a fez and the other is pulling something out of the water. A girl, wearing a light head scarf, is crouched on the bank and reaching into the water. Two of the children are also in another image in this collection (ULPA 2004.003.035E).) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Seven women, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Seven women, wearing veils or scarves on their heads, and holding baskets and other bundles, pause on a tree-lined dirt road during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers, barbed-wire fence, circa 1915.] (French soldier, leaning on his rifle, appears to be using his foot to test tension on a barbed-wire fence as other soldiers look on. Believed to have been taken during the photographer's field training at Autun, France in 1915.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Two turkeys in field, circa 1917.] (Fantail and legs of a light-colored turkey standing next to a darker-colored turkey in a field. Farmhouse and barn are partially visible on hill behind them.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier on village street, France, circa 1917.] (Lone soldier stands on a deserted cobblestone street leading to a church or clock tower in a French village during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Little girl, France, circa 1916.] (Little girl sits on a rock near a wooden fence or building and smiles for the camera. The girl, also in image ULPA 2004.003.009B, is wearing a light-colored dress and a bow in her hair.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [River village as viewed from hillside trench, Europe, circa 1917.] (Soldiers in and near a hillside trench, overlooking a river and village during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French army convoy, 1917.] (Trucks in a French army convoy pause on the road, reportedly en route to Verdun in August, 1917.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier Jeunet, France, circa 1916.] (Andre Jeunet sits on a stone bench or container near a large tree. He is wearing the uniform of France's 139e Regiment d'Infanterie.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers, circa 1917.] (Andre Jeunet, center, and fellow French soldiers appear to be clowning around as they take a break to wash up outdoors. Jeunet is wearing the jacket of a higher-ranking soldier and the other two have towels.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers, circa 1916.] (Group of French soldiers sit and stand near the corner of a building, probably in a military camp, during a World War I. Some are smoking.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier on hillside, circa 1917.] (Lone French soldier sits on hillside overlooking a river during World War I. Explosion is visible in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Two turkeys in field, circa 1917.] (Pair of turkeys, one light-colored and the other dark, in a field. Dirt road and buildings are partially visible among the trees behind them.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Explosion viewed from trench in France, circa 1915.] (A soldier and an exploding artillery shell as seen over the rock wall of a trench during World War I. Landscape and foliage are similar to other pictures in this collection which were taken during the photographer's army training exercises in Autun, France in 1915.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier reading on cot, circa 1916.] (French soldier reads as he reclines on a cot during World War I. Two other soldiers are sitting behind him in what appears to an attic or barn loft. They are probably members of the 139e Regiment d'Infanterie, and are believed to be in northeastern France.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier, circa 1916.] (French soldier from the 139e Regiment d'Infanterie crouches near the ground in front of a large barn. This soldier is also in images ULPA 2004.003.008B and ULPA 2003.004.027B.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers relaxing, circa 1916.] (Godet, center, a close friend of photographer Andre Jeunet, and two other French soldiers relax on and near the running board of an army vehicle. At least one appears to be eating. Insignia on their collars indicate they are part of the 139e Regiment d'Infanterie. A frame building is in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Children playing soldiers, circa 1916.] (Children, wearing World War I military helmets and holding soldiers' weapons and other tools, stand at the side of a tree-lined dirt road. One is waving a flag.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldiers cooking, circa 1916.] (Godet, far left, a friend of photographer Andre Jeunet, and another soldier play with a dog while a third soldier cooks over a fire on the banks of a stream or river. At the right edge of the image is the hand of another man holding a small fish. The soldiers are part of the 139e Regiment d'Infanterie, and are believed to be in northeastern France.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Steam engine, France, circa 1916.] (Single steam engine, number 3116, on railroad tracks in France during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [French soldier at entrance to mausoleum, circa 1916.] (French soldier reclines on sloped ground just outside the open door of a large brick mausoleum. Believed to be in France.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [City street, France, circa 1917.] (City street, lined with stone buildings and lamp posts, leads to a large building with tall columns. Taken in France during World War I.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldier in dugout, Balkans, circa 1918.] (Soldier sitting in dugout at end of a deep trench during World War I. He is believed to be a member of France's 34e Colonial Regiment stationed near Monastir in the Balkans in 1917-1919.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Chaulnes 25-9-'16.] (Battlefield at Chaulnes, France on September 25, 1916. Railroad tracks are in the foreground. Handwritten on bottom of negative "Chaulnes 25-9-'16.") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [G.A.R. parade, Rochester, N.Y.] (Parade down a city street. A marching band followed by a horse-drawn wagon marches down a city street lined with crowds of people in front of the buildings. A flag and bunting are hung from some of the buildings. Possibly a parade for the G.A.R. (Grand Army of the Republic). In the background is a stone arch. Descriptive information on back of card: Photographed and published by N.L. Cornell, Randolph, N.Y. Local Stereoscopic work to order, interior or exterior, Schools, Dwellings, Flowers, etc.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cattle Scene on Licking River. (Cattle cross a quiet body of water with more cattle on the right bank. A broken log bridge is in the water in front of the cattle. Trees are in the background. Series information on back of card: Gems of Kentucky Scenery, Second Series. No. 2065, Cattle Scene on Licking River.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Wreck of the Union Depot. (Ruins of Union Depot at 7th Street and Water Street. Collapsed shell of a building with a train car covered by rubble. Men stand on the wooden platform in front of the debris. Caption: Louisville Tornado. Wreck of the Union Depot. Text on bottom: Copyright 1890, by Geo. Barker. Text on left: Geo Barker, Niagara Falls NY. Text on right: American Foreign Genre & Comic. Gems of Instantaneous Photography.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View of City Hall building. (Louisville City Hall as viewed from across the street. There is a clock tower on the left corner. A park is across the street from City Hall. City Hall was at 6th Street and Jefferson Street. Text on left: Louisville and Vicinity. Text on right: Wybrant's Stereo Views. ULPA 2002.14.03 is a duplicate image.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville, Ky. Ohio River bridge span. (Looking down bridge crossing the Ohio River. Train tracks are on the left side. A pedestrian walkway is on the right, with a woman and two children standing on it. Written on back: Louisville, Ky. Ohio River Bridge Span.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville Ky. Great railroad bridge over Ohio River (one mile long). (View from below of railroad bridge crossing the Ohio River between Louisville, Kentucky, and southern Indiana. A man stands on the ground, and a train appears to be crossing the bridge. Caption: Louisville Ky. Great Railroad Bridge over Ohio River. (one mile long.). Text on bottom: Copyright 1890, by Geo. Barker. Text on left: Geo. Barker, Photographer. Text on right: Niagara Falls, New York.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Ruins of Louisville tobacco warehouse. (Collapsed building on a lot surrounded by other buildings. The lot is covered with piles of rubble. Caption: Louisville Tornado. Ruins of Louisville Tobacco Warehouse. Text on bottom: Copyright 1890 by Geo. Barker. Text on left: Geo. Barker, Photographer. Text on right: Niagara Falls, New York.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Birds eye view of Louisville. Looking west from tower of City Hall. (View of Louisville city streets and buildings from the City Hall tower. City Hall was at 6th Street and Jefferson Street. Text on left: Louisville and Vicinity. Text on right: Wybrant's Stereo Views. Written on back: Birds eye view of Louisville. Looking west from tower of City Hall.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Birds eye view of Louisville. Looking south from tower of City Hall. (View of Louisville city streets and buildings from the City Hall tower. Text on left: Louisville and Vicinity. Written on back: Birds eye view of Louisville. Looking south from tower of City Hall. Text on right: Wybrant's Stereo Views.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Residence Jas. Bridgeford Louisville Ky. (Three-story ornate house with arched windows on the first and third floors. James Bridgeford lived at 405 West Broadway. Written on back: Residence Jas. [James] Bridgeford Louisville Ky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Rail and bridge between Louisville Ky and Jeffersonville Ind. One mile long. (Bridge between Louisville, Kentucky, and Jeffersonville, Indiana. Rocky shore with a building behind it, and then the bridge crossing the Ohio River.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Alexander's Blooded Stock, Woodburn, Ky. Sheep (south down). (Group of five sheep stand in a group in a fenced area in front of a building. Text written on bottom right: Southdown Sheep. Information on back of card: Alexander's Blooded Stock (Woodburn, Ky.) Photographed and Published by James Mullen, No. 52 East Main St. Lexington, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Sacred Heart church after tornado, Louisville, Ky. (Ruins of Sacred Heart Church at Broadway and 17th Street. Church whose roof and walls have collapsed except for the front wall, which still stands. Men stand near the rubble of the building. Caption: Sacred Heart Church after Tornado, Louisville, Ky. Text on bottom: Copyright, by J.F. Jarvis. Text on left: J.F. Jarvis, Publisher, Washington, D.C. Text on right: Sold only by Underwood & Underwood, Baltimore, Md.-Ottawa, Kas.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [City view, Louisville, Ky.] (Overhead view of city streets with the Ohio River and Indiana in the background. Text on left: Louisville and Vicinity. Text on right: Wybrant's Stereo Views.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Birds eye view of Louisville. Looking south-east from tower of City Hall. (View of Louisville city streets and buildings from the City Hall tower. City Hall was located at 6th Street and Jefferson Street. A church steeple is in the background. Text on left: Louisville and Vicinity. Text on right: Wybrant's Stereo Views.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Alexander's Blooded Stock, Woodburn, Ky. 9th Duchess (short horn Durham). (Young African-American man in overalls and a hat holds the end of a rope attached to a cow as a leash. They are in a fenced area in front of a building. The cow has white markings. Text written on bottom right: '9th Duchess' S.H.D. Information on back of card: Alexander's Blooded Stock (Woodburn, Ky.) Photographed and Published by James Mullen, No. 52 East Main St. Lexington, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Alexander's Blooded Stock, Woodburn, Ky. Dolly Clay Alderney calf). (Young man wearing overalls and a dome-shaped hat stands in a fenced area in front of a building holding a rope attached to a calf as a leash. Text written on bottom right: Dolly Clay - Alderney. Information on back of card: Alexander's Blooded Stock (Woodburn, Ky.) Photographed and Published by James Mullen, No. 52 East Main St. Lexington, Kentucky. ULPA 2000.89.02 is a duplicate image.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Alexander's Blooded Stock, Woodburn, Ky. Lady Lincoln (Alderney). (Light-colored cow stands in a fenced area in front of a building. A leash is attached to a harness around its face. Text written on bottom right: Lady Lincoln - Alderney. Information on back of card: Alexander's Blooded Stock (Woodburn, Ky.) Photographed and Published by James Mullen, No. 52 East Main St. Lexington, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Uncle Tom's cabin - The old folks at home, Kentucky, U.S.A. (An elderly African-American couple sits on a bench in front of a cabin. The woman appears to be sewing while the man looks at her. A ladder leans against the cabin's chimney. Title: Uncle Tom's Cabin--The Old Folks at Home, Kentucky, U.S.A. Copyright, 1895, by Strohmeyer & Wyman. Text on the left of image: Underwood & Underwood, Publishers. New York. London. Toronto-Canada. Ottawa-Kansas. Text on right: Works and Studios. Arlington, N.J. Littleton, N.H. Washington, D.C. Descriptive information on back of card: Uncle Tom's Cabin - The Old Folks at Home, Kentucky, U.S.A. [in multiple languages]. ULPA 1999.36.155 is a duplicate image.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • St. John's Episcopal Church and rectory, after tornado, Louisville, Ky. (Ruins of a church building behind an iron fence -- St. John's Episcopal Church at 1115 West Jefferson Street. The building still stands but has no roof and is missing most of the front wall. A pile of rubble lies in front of the building. A woman and two small children stand on the left side on the sidewalk. A man stands on the right side. Title: St. John's Episcopal Church and Rectory, after Tornado, Louisville Ky. Copyright statement: Copyright, by J.F. Jarvis. Text on left: J.F. Jarvis, Publisher, Washington, D.C. Text on right: Sold by Underwood & Underwood, Baltimore, Md.--Ottawa, Kas. Descriptive information on back of card: St. John's Episcopal Church and Rectory, after Tornado, Louisville, Ky. [in multiple languages]. UPLA 1999.55.02 is a duplicate image.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Miracle of the Louisville cyclone, U.S.A. (Statue of Virgin Mary against a stone or marble wall as seen through a stack of rubble, including broken beams. Title: The Miracle of the Louisville Cyclone, U.S.A. Copyright statement: Copyright 1890, by Geo. Barker. Text on left: Geo. Barker, Photographer, Strohmeyer & Wyman, Publishers. Stamps on either side of the text say GRAND PRIZE DIAMOND BADGE and ELEVEN MEDALS FIRST PRIZE. Text on right: Sold only by Underwood & Underwood New York, London, Toronto-Canada, Ottawa-Kansas. Descriptive information on back of card: Miracle of the Louisville Cyclone, U.S.A. [in multiple languages]. Image is duplicate of ULPA 1999.36.002, but title and other text are different.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky scenery. Red River Valley. (Man sitting on a tree stump on the side of a dirt road. In the distance there is a man on a horse standing in shallow water with trees in the background. On back of card: Kentucky Scenery. Red River Valley.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • West Point cadets in inauguration parade. (Marching band of cadets in blue and yellow uniforms march down a street with crowds of people on either side and buildings in the background. Title: West Point Cadets in Inauguration Parade. Stereograph advertisement on back of card.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lovers Leap Kentucky. (Lover's Leap, a 600 foot cliff in Powell County, Kentucky. Large rock formation partially obscured by trees. Below is a cabin or barn also partially obscured by trees. On back of card: Lovers Leap Kentucky. Duplicate image of ULPA 1999.36.205 but with different photographer and publisher information.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Maysville, Ky. (View of a large house from the street. Steps lead to a front walkway to the front door of a large, two-story house with shutters. A woman stands on the sidewalk with a baby in a carriage. Another woman stands on the left side of the front yard. A man stands on the right side of the yard. Written on back of card: Maysville, Ky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Maysville, Kentucky on Ohio River. (View of a town or small city by the water. Clusters of buildings of varying sizes. Written on back: Maysville Kentucky on Ohio River. NE of Lexington. SE of Cincinnati. Bldg with classic cupola is Mason County Courthouse.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Maysville, Ky. Decoration day. (Crowd of people on a dirt road with buildings on either side and in the background, possibly a parade. The men in front are holding horns. Men, women, and children line the streets. American flags are in the background. Written on back of card: Maysville, Ky. Decoration Day. ULPA 1984.13.16 is a duplicate image.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 10th and Main sts., looking west, Louisville, Ky. (Broken boards, rocks, and other rubble at 10th Street and Main Street in Louisville, Kentucky. A row of damaged buildings, including some missing roofs and walls, is on the right. Title: 257 10th and Main Sts., Looking West, Louisville, Ky. Text on left: Webster & Albee, Publishers, Rochester, N.Y. Text on right: American Scenery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Annetta's Dome at Mammoth Cave. (Large rock walls with a gap between. Title: Annetta's Dome at Mammoth Cave. Text on bottom: Views of Mammoth Cave and Vicinity. Text on top: 'These are pronounced the very best specimens of subterranean photography yet produced.' - Scientific American. Text on left: Ben Hains, Photographer. Text on right: New Albany, Ind., U.S.A. Series: Views of Mammoth Cave and Vicinity,; Edmondson Co., Ky., U.S.A. No. 68, Annetta's Dome. All interior views are Copyrighted, (1889, 1890, 1893, 1896). Views for sale by H.C. Ganter, Mammoth Cave, Ky., and by Ben Hains, Cave Photographer, New Albany, Ind., U.S.A.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Portsmouth (O.) and Scioto Valley from Kentucky hill. (In the foreground stands a row of people in front of a log fence. Behind the fence are rows of crops and then a river. On the other side of the river are buildings and a smokestack with mountains in the distance. Title: 3403 Portsmouth (O.) and Scioto Valley from Kentucky Hill. Text on left: American Scenery. Text on right: Ohio and Mississippi Rivers.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Vose, Dinsmore & Company National Spring Works, Chicago, Illinois] (Long, four-story brick or stone building. Over one doorway is the sign 'Vose, Dinsmore & Co. National Spring Works.' Two or three men stand in front of the door. Horse-drawn carriages are on the street in front of the building. Text on left: Views of Chicago and Vicinity, Before and After the Great Fire. Text on right: J.H. Abbott, Photographer, 976 No. Clark St., Chicago, Ill.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Honore block, Chicago, Illinois] (Ruined shell of a building. There is one wall still standing, but the rest of the building is mostly rubble with a dirt road in front of it. The Honore Block was located at South Dearborn and West Adams Streets at the northwest corner. Text on left: Views of Chicago and Vicinity, Before and After the Great Fire. Text on right: J.H. Abbott, Photographer, 976 No. Clark St., Chicago, Ill. ULPA 2000.95.12 is a duplicate image.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Public Garden. (Park containing a pond, circular fountains, grassy areas, and a statue of a man on a horse. Trees and buildings are in the background. Text on left: America Illustrated. Text on right: Boston & Suburbs. Descriptive information on back of card: Boston and Vicinity, The Public Garden. The Public Garden is situated in the western part of the city, and is separated from the Common by Charles Street. It contains an area of twenty-four acres, of which three are occupied by a pond of irregular shape, spanned by a massive bridge of stone and iron. The original level of the Public Garden was much below that of the neighboring streets, and the land was filled in, at an expense of about seventy thousand dollars. It is laid out with irregular walks, bordered with flowers and ornamental shrubs; it is adorned with fountains, vases, and statues of bronze and marble. A spacious greenhouse is filled, during the winter, with choice flowers. An equestrian statue of Washington faces Commonwealth Avenue at the westerly side of the garden. It was designed by Thomas Ball and was erected in 1869, at a cost of forty-two thousand dollars. A large statue of Edward Everett, and a granite monument to commemorate the discovery of ether, are near the northern side of the garden. In the basin of one of the fountains, stands a marble statue of Venus, presented to the city by J.D. Bates, Esq. This garden must ever remain as a park and garden for the public.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bridge over Indian creek. (Two sets of people on a stone bridge over a body of water with a white house in the background. On back: American Stereoscopic Co. Photo J. Mullen. Stamp on back: Given Feb 28, 1927 by Wm. S. Appleton.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View of city street from above] (View of a narrow city street with buildings on either side and at the end. Some of the buildings have awnings. Horse-drawn carriages and wagons are on the street. Text on left: America Illustrated. Text on right: Boston & Suburbs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Broadway, east from F. Street, South Boston. (Close-up view of a tree-lined cobblestone street with houses on either side. Text on left: America Illustrated. Text on right: Boston & Suburbs. Series information: 1874-5. Broadway, East from F. Street, South Boston.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Soldiers and sailors monument, Boston, Massachusetts] (Soldiers and Sailors Monument on Boston Commons in Boston, Massachusetts. The monument was dedicated in 1877 as a memorial for soldiers and sailors from Massachusetts who died in the Civil War. Column mounted on a pedestal. At the top of the column is a statue. Smaller statues are at the corners of the pedestal base. There appears to be a crowd of people around the monument. Text on left: America Illustrated. Text on right: Boston & Suburbs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Panorama from Bunker Hill monument. (Panoramic view of a neighborhood with rows of houses and other buildings. Title: Panorama from Bunker Hill Monument. Text on left: Boston & Suburbs. Text on right: American Illustrated.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Junction of Broadway and Fifth Ave., New York's best known streets, from the Flat Iron Building. (Two streets, identified as Broadway and Fifth Avenue, meet at an angle with the Flat Iron Building in between them in New York City. Both streets are lined with buildings and have pedestrians and horse-drawn carriages and wagons on them. The street on the left has streetcars on the tracks. Title: Junction of Broadway and Fifth Ave., New York's Best Known Streets, From the Flat Iron Building. Copyright 1904, by William H. Rau. Text on left: Berry, Kelley & Chadwick Publishers. Philadelphia, U.S.A. Text on right: Sold only by Berry, Kelley & Chadwick. Office: Philadelphia Studio.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View of house through picket fence from across the street] (View of a two-story clapboard house from across the street. A white picket fence runs across the front yard. The house is partially obscured by trees. Text on left: Views of Chicago, and Vicinity. Text on right: J. Carbutt, Photographer, Chicago, Illinois.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Chicago building] (Large white building, possibly a house or church. Details include pointed roofs, a tower or steeple, and a long front porch. Framed by trees with a ladder leaning against one of the trunks. Text on left: Views of Chicago, and Vicinity. Text on right: J. Carbutt, Photographer, Chicago, Illinois.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Florida Section. G. & S. Building. (Large room containing a deck, palm trees, a hut with grass roof, and a counter and display booth. Two men stand at the counter. Hanging in the background is a large sign that says 'Florida.' Title: 994. Florida Section, G. & S. Building. Stamp: Wilson Copyright 1885. Text on left: Centennial Photographic Co. Philada, 1876. Text on right: 1884 - New Orleans - 1885. On back of card: 1776. Philadelphia. 1876. Centennial Photographic Company International Exhibition. 1884. New Orleans. 1885. Edward L. Wilson. Registered 1884 by the Centennial Photographic Company. Copyrighted 1884.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • J & P Coats main building. (Large room with a gazebo-shaped structure in the center with benches in the front and surrounded by counters and tables with other items. Banners in the background include the words 'For Exhibition [ ],' '[ ]Liy & Pawtucket,' and 'Spool Cot[ ].' Title: 840 J& P Coats Main Building. Stamp: Wilson Copyright 1885. Text on left: Centennial Photographic Co. Philada, 1876. Text on right: 1884 - New Orleans - 1885. On back of card: 1776. Philadelphia. 1876. Centennial Photographic Company International Exhibition. 1884. New Orleans. 1885. Edward L. Wilson. Registered 1884 by the Centennial Photographic Company. Copyrighted 1884.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Track of cyclone - Falls City Hall. (Ruins of Falls City Hall at 1126 West Market Street. Large piles of rubble on a lot surrounded by standing buildings. People pass by on the street on foot and in a wagon. A tornado struck Louisville on March 27, 1890. Caption: Louisville Tornado. Track of Cyclone - Falls City Hall. Text on bottom: Copyright 1890 by Geo. Barker. Text on left: Geo. Barker, Photographer. Text on right: Niagara Falls, New York.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • King cotton and Louisiana, G. & S. Building. (Display, apparently made of cotton, of an elderly man and woman sitting next to each other. Both wear glasses and the man holds a cane. At his feet is a dog. At her feet is a cat. Behind them is a large bird with the date '1784' on it. Title: 277. King Cotton and Louisiana, G. & S. Building. Text on left: Centennial Photographic Co. Philada, 1876. Text on right: 1884 - New Orleans - 1885. On back of card: 1776. Philadelphia. 1876. Centennial Photographic Company International Exhibition. 1884. New Orleans. 1885. Edward L. Wilson. Registered 1884 by the Centennial Photographic Company. Copyrighted 1884.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lot's Wife - salt - Main Building. (Large sculpture of a woman carrying a container on her shoulder, apparently constructed from salt. On the pedestal is the title 'Lot's Wife' and below are rows of small bags. On a sheet of paper are the words 'Pure Rock Salt' and 'American Salt Co's Mine.' Title: 567. Lot's Wife - Salt- Main Building. Stamp: Wilson Copyright 1885. Text on left: Centennial Photographic Co. Philada, 1876. Text on right: 1884 - New Orleans - 1885. On back of card: 1776. Philadelphia. 1876. Centennial Photographic Company International Exhibition. 1884. New Orleans. 1885. Edward L. Wilson. Registered 1884 by the Centennial Photographic Company. Copyrighted 1884.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Persimmon exhibit, Mexican section, Hort'l Hall. (Long tables with plates of persimmons on them in a building that looks like a greenhouse with tall plants in the background. A sign on one of the tables includes the words 'Japanese Persimmon.' A man stands at the end of the table. Title: 586. Persimmon Exhibit, Mexican Section, Hort'l Hall. Stamp: Wilson Copyright 1885. Text on left: Centennial Photographic Co. Philada, 1876. Text on right: 1884 - New Orleans - 1885. On back of card: 1776. Philadelphia. 1876. Centennial Photographic Company International Exhibition. 1884. New Orleans. 1885. Edward L. Wilson. Registered 1884 by the Centennial Photographic Company. Copyrighted 1884.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Main Building, aisle 57, north. (Long and wide aisle in a large building. On either side are poles and various exhibit spaces. In the front, one man sits next to a small building and another man stands to the side. Title: 215. Main Building, Aisle 57, North. Stamp: Wilson Copyright 1885. Text on left: Centennial Photographic Co. Philada, 1876. Text on right: 1884 - New Orleans - 1885. On back of card: 1776. Philadelphia. 1876. Centennial Photographic Company International Exhibition. 1884. New Orleans. 1885. Edward L. Wilson. Registered 1884 by the Centennial Photographic Company. Copyrighted 1884.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Old Flag Cal'a section, G. & S. Building. (Large room with multiple exhibit spaces across the floor. A man stands near the front. Two American flags hang from the ceiling. Title: 242. The Old Flag Cal'a [California] Section, G & S. Building. Stamp: Wilson Copyright 1885. Text on left: Centennial Photographic Co. Philada, 1876. Text on right: 1884 - New Orleans - 1885.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Nebraska section, G. & S. Building. (Exhibit space featuring logs and a large sign decorated with emblems and the words 'Corn is King.' Title: 898. Nebraska Section, G. & S. Building. Stamp: Wilson Copyright 1885. Text on left: Centennial Photographic Co. Philada, 1876. Text on right: 1884 - New Orleans - 1885.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kansas section, G. & S. Building. (Exhibit space with a stuffed buffalo in the foreground next to vegetables and a stack of bags, possibly flour. In the background are signs that say 'Kansas' and other signs. To the left is a decorative tower with 'Kansas' around the top. Title: 629. Kansas Section, G. & S. Building. Stamp: Wilson Copyright 1885. Text on left: Centennial Photographic Co. Philada, 1876. Text on right: 1884 - New Orleans - 1885.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Main Building, Main Ave. (Large room with high ceilings and rows of glass booths. Some people sit on benches in the middle of an aisle. Title: 872- Main Building, Main Ave. Text on left: Centennial Series. Text on right: Philadelphia 1876.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Pump Annex Machinery Hall. (In the foreground are metal vessels, possibly part of a machine. In the center, people sit on rows of benches facing the back where sprays of water shoot towards the ceiling. Title: 1722- Pump Annex Machinery Hall. Text on left: Centennial Series. Text on right: Philadelphia 1876.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Corliss engine. (Large, two-story piece of equipment identified as an engine with at least three sets of ladders attached. Across a beam near the base of the machine are the words 'Geo. H. Corliss Providence R.I.' Title: 496- Corliss Engine. Text on left: Centennial Series. Text on right: Philadelphia 1876.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Wreck of Church of Sacred Heart - interior (Ruins of Sacred Heart Church at Broadway and 17th Street. Shell of a brick church whose roof and brick walls have collapsed. A tornado struck Louisville on March 27, 1890. Caption: Louisville Tornado. Wreck of Church of Sacred Heart - Interior. Text on bottom: Copyright 1890 by Geo. Barker. Text on left: Geo. Barker, Photographer. Text on right: Niagara Falls, New York.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Horticultural Hall. (Exterior view of large, ornate building in the background surrounded by sculpted gardens. Title: 702- Horticultural Hall. Text on left: Centennial Series. Text on right: Philadelphia 1876.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Horti Hall, interior from N. gallery. (Large room filled with large plants and fountains with a chandelier hanging from the ceiling. The right side of the room contains a row of arched doorways. Title: 867- Horti [Horticultural] Hall, Interior from N. Gallery. Text on left: Centennial Series. Text on right: Philadelphia 1876.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Transept from S. gallery. (Large exhibit space filled with glass booths, cabinets, and chairs. One sign says 'Rosengarten & Sons. Manufacturing Chemists.' There is also a sign that says 'Germany.' Title: [ ] Transept from S. Gallery. Text on left (upside down): Philadelphia 1876. Text on right: Centennial Series.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Machinery Hall. (Large, long room with tall ceilings containing cannons, flags, and obelisk, and other unidentified items. There are signs reading 'Germany' and 'Great Britain and Ireland.' Title: [ ] Machinery Hall. Text on left: Centennial Series. Text on right: Philadelphia 1876.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [G.A.R. convention, Rochester, N.Y.] (Stone arch over a city street with streetcar tracks running down the center. The arch has the letters G, A, and R on it. People cross the street. Most likely for the GAR (Grand Army of the Republic). Descriptive information on back of card: Photographed and published by N.L. Cornell, Randolph, N.Y. Local Stereoscopic work to order, interior or exterior, Schools, Dwellings, Flowers, etc.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia--1876. [Main building] (Large group of horse-drawn carriages on the street in front of a group of streetcars. In the background is a tall and long building. Some people walk on the street. Title: Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia--1876. Text on left: James Cremer, Photographer and Publisher. Text on right: 18 South Eighth Street, Philadelphia. Handwritten on back: Main Building.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Union Depot looking southeast. (Shell of a building. Part of the left, rear, and right walls still stand, surrounded by rubble. Two horse-drawn wagons are on the street in front of the ruins. Text on left: Views in Chicago & Vicinity Before and after the Fire. Text on right: P.B. Greene, Photographer, 315 West Jackson Street. Descriptive information on back of card: Union Depot looking southeast.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Terrace Row, Mich Ave. (Long, four-story building close to the street with small trees in front. Handwritten Title: Terrace Row, Mich [Michigan] Ave. Text on left: Views in Chicago & Vicinity Before and after the Fire. Text on right: P.B. Greene, Photographer, 315 West Jackson Street. Sticker on back of card: Choices and Selected Views. J.A. Stoddard, 248 Fulton St., Chicago. Call, or drop a line, and I will call you, with an Assortment.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Fountain, Dep't Agriculture. (Man standing in front of a fountain covered with plants. In the background, there is a horse-drawn wagon with two people standing near the back of the wagon. Text on left: Views of Washington, D.C. and Vicinity. Text on right: H. H. Hempler, Manufacturing Optician, 453 Pennsylvania Avenue, Northwest corner 4 1/2 Street, Washington, D.C. Series information on back of card: Views of Washington D.C. and Vicinity. No. 89 Fountain, Dep't [Department of] Agriculture.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Chambers House of Representatives. (View of the chambers for the House of Representatives from the back. Rows of desks in a half circle facing an elevated desk in the front. Text on left: Views of Washington, D.C. and Vicinity. Text on right: Text on right: H. H. Hempler, Manufacturing Optician, 453 Pennsylvania Avenue, Northwest corner 4 1/2 Street, Washington, D.C. Series information on back of card. Views of Washington, D.C. and Vicinity, no 18: Chambers House of Representatives.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Dr. Griffith's residence, after tornado, Louisville, Ky. (View of a house from across the street. The roof has collapsed or blown away and the front left corner of the house has collapsed. Rubble is in the yard and on the sidewalk in front. Caption: Dr. Griffith's Residence, after Tornado, Louisville, Ky. Text on left: J. F. Jarvis, Publisher, Washington, D.C. Text on right: Sold only by Underwood & Underwood, Baltimore, Md.-Ottawa, Kas.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Broadway north from the post office building, New York, U.S.A. (Crowded city street filled with streetcars, horses and carriages, and pedestrians. The streets are lined with tall buildings. Title: 6. Broadway North from the Post Office Building, New York, U.S.A. Copyright statement: Copyright 1903 by H.C. White Co. Text on left: Imperial Series. Text on right: Imperial Series.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Georgetown, Colorado. (Aerial view of a town in a valley between mountains. Rows of houses and other buildings with mountains in the background. Title: 395-d. Georgetown, Colorado. Copyright, 1900, by C.L. Wesson. Text on left: International View Co. Text on right: Decatur, Ill., U.S.A.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Senate Chambers in United States Capitol] (View of the chambers for the United States Senate. Rows of small desks in a half circle face an elevated desk in the center. Text on left: J.F. Jarvis' Stereoscopic Views. Text on right: 185 Penn. Ave., Wash'n, D.C. Written on back of card: Senate Chambers - U.S. Capitol. E.G. Randlett. 18 Grove St. Exeter.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Entering Midway Plaisance to the World's Fair Grounds, Chicago, U.S. (Large crowd of people, mostly men, outside at the World's Fair in Chicago (1893). Some people appear to be climbing or sitting on a pole in front of an arch over the crowd. Title: Entering Midway Plaisance to the World's Fair Grounds, Chicago, U.S. Entrando a los terrenos de la Exposicion Universal, por el 'Midway Plaisance,' Chicago. Copyright, 1899, by J.F. Jarvis. Text on left: J.F. Jarvis, Publisher, Washington, D.C. Text on right: Sold only by Underwood & Underwood, Liverpool,-New York,-Chicago,-Toronto-Ottawa, Kas.-El Paso, Tex.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Sunken gardens and government building, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A. (Long building with a dome and columns behind formal gardens, with a wide set of stairs leading to the entrance. Four women, two of them holding umbrellas, stand at the end of the garden. Title: 15001-Sunken Gardens and Government Building, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A. Text on left: Keystone View Company. Manufacturers & Publishers. Copyright 1904 by B.L. Singley. Text on right: Meadville, Pa., St. Louis, Mo., San Francisco, Cal., Toronto, Can, New York, N.Y., London, England. Grey card.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mauch Chunk, American Switzerland, U.S.A. (View of the town Mauch Chunk in Pennsylvania, now named Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania. Town at the base of a hill with a railroad trestle crossing the river that runs along the other edge of town. Title: 7793. Mauch Chunk, American Switzerland, U.S.A. Text on right: Copyright 1893, by B.W. Kilburn. Descriptive information on back of card: Photographed and Published by B.W. Kilburn, Littleton, N.H.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bear Mountain. (Tree-covered mountain with a small town at its base and a body of water, possibly a river, in front of the town. There might be railroad tracks across the base of the mountain, as well. Title: No. 152-Bear Mountain. Text on left: Views on the Line of the Lehigh Valley R.R. Mauch Chunk and Vicinity. Text on right: Photographed and Published by M.A. Kleckner, Mansion House, Mauch Chunk. Descriptive information on back of card: Photographed by Knowlton Bros. Northampton, Mass.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Covered bridge] (Long covered bridge with two smaller covered bridges to the left and right at the base of a tree-covered hill or mountain.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cor. State & Buffalo Sts. (Large, five-story building at the intersection of two city streets with buildings on either side. There are a few pedestrians, a streetcar, and carriages visible on the streets. Title: No. 89. Cor. State & Buffalo Sts. Text on right: Rochester Views. M.H. Monroe, Photographer.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Altoona. (View of small town from a slight distance with tree-covered hills and mountains in the background and a fence and grassy area in the foreground. A few people sit on the grass. Among the buildings a steeple and tower are visible. Title: 406. Altoona. Text on bottom: Photographed and Published by W.T. Purviance. Philadelphia. Text on left and right: The Scenery of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mouth of Townsend Creek. (Man stands with a horse and wagon by a creek. The man holds the horse's bridle with the wagon behind him. Series information on back of card: From Gems of Kentucky Scenery, First Series. No. 2026, Mouth of Townsend Creek.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Au Sable Chasm - Birmingham Falls. (Heavy waterfalls with a covered bridge and buildings in the background. Title: Au Sable Chasm-Birmingham Falls. Text on left: The Picturesque of the Adirondacks. Text on right: Purviance. Philadelphia. Photographer and Publisher.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Rainbow Falls. Watkins Glen. (Narrow waterfall rushing between two large rocky cliffs. Title: Rainbow Falls. Watkins Glen. Text on bottom: Watkins Glen. Text on left: The Scenery of the North Central Railway. Text on right: Purviance. Philadelphia. Photographer and Publisher. Written on back of card: Lucy J. Grimes. Jane Johnson. Jan 1895.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Whirlwind Gorge. Watkins Glen. (Stairs between two rocky cliffs with a waterfall rushing behind and below. Title: Whirlwind Gorge. Watkins Glen. Text on bottom: Watkins Glen. Text on left: The Scenery of the North Central Railway. Text on right: Purviance. Philadelphia. Photographer and Publisher.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Watkins Glen. Cascades in Glenn Alpha. (Small waterfalls flowing into and out of a pond with a set of stairs above the top waterfall between two rocky cliffs. A man or boy sits to the left on a rock. Title: Watkins Glen. Cascades in Glen Alpha. Text on bottom: Watkins Glen. Text on left: The Scenery of the North Central Railway. Text on right: Purviance. Philadelphia. Photographer and Publisher. Image is similar to ULPA 2000.95.59.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Giants Gorge. (Water flowing down and between a rocky crevice with trees above. Title: The Giants Gorge. Text on bottom: Watkins Glen. Text on left: The Scenery of the North Central Railway. Text on right: Purviance. Philadelphia. Photographer and Publisher.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cascades in Glen Alpha. Watkins Glen. (Small waterfalls flowing into and out of a pond with a set of stairs above the top waterfall between two rocky cliffs. A man and woman sit to the left on a rock. A second couple is on a deck below the stairs, while a man stands on the stairs. Title: Cascades in Glen Alpha. Watkins Glen. Text on bottom: Watkins Glen. Text on left: The Scenery of the North Central Railway. Text on right: Purviance. Philadelphia. Photographer and Publisher. Image is similar to ULPA 2000.95.57.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cavern Cascade. (Small but long waterfall cascades into a pool below with rocky cliffs on either side and a steep staircase joining the two cliffs. Title: Cavern Cascade. Text on bottom: Watkins Glen. Text on left: The Scenery of the North Central Railway. Text on right: Purviance. Philadelphia. Photographer and Publisher.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Wilson House, North Adams, Mass. (Large, four-story white building, identified as the Wilson House, at the intersection of two streets in North Adams, Massachusetts. There is a tower on the left side and one almost in the center. A horse and wagon are on the street below. Text on left: Hoosac Tunnel Series. Text on right: North Adams & Vicinity. Series information on back of card: List of Views in North Adams and Vicinity. Published and For Sale at Wholesale and Retail by H.M. Ramsdell, No. 6 Wilson Block, - North Adams, Mass. No. 32, Wilson House, North Adams, Mass.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • North Adams from Robinson Hall. (View of the town of North Adams, Massachusetts, from Robinson Hall. Cluster of buildings in front of a hill or mountain range. A few steeples and a chimney stack rise above the rooftops. Title: North Adams from Robinson Hall. Text on left: Hoosac Tunnel Series. Text on right: North Adams & Vicinity. Written on back of card: Massachusetts College.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Broadway from the post office, New York City. (View of a busy Broadway avenue in New York City from a post office. Tall buildings line the street which contains pedestrians, who are also on the sidewalk, streetcars, and horses and carriages. Title: 1001. Broadway from the Post Office, New York City. Text on left: Sterro-Photo Co., Publishers. Text on right: Dolgeville, N.Y., U.S.A.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View on Red River near Lindsay's. (Man appears to be sitting on a long log or plank across a body of water identified as the Red River. In the foreground is a bridge made of logs. In the background are trees on the other river bank. Series information on back of card: Gems of Kentucky Scenery, First Series. No. 2033, View on Red River near Lindsay's.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Pennsylvania College, Gettysburg Pa. (House and large building with columns and a tower behind a fenced-in field with bare trees. A dirt road runs along the right side. A person stands near the front of the field. Title: No. 509. Pennsylvania College, Gettysburg Pa. Text on bottom: (Copyrighted 1875.) Text on left: Stereo Gems of Gettysburg Scenery. Text on right: Published by W. H. Tipton & Co., Gettysburg Pa.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brooklyn Bridge, New York] (Crowd of people crossing the Brooklyn Bridge in New York. In the front are two men, a woman, and a child, with more people behind them, including a child on a bicycle. Title: Brooklyn [illegible]. Text on left: The Universal Photo Art Co. C.H. Graves, Publisher, Phila., U.S.A. Text on right: Offices Philadelphia, Naperville, Ill., New York, London, Paris, Hamburg.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [House of Representatives] (View of the chambers for the Senate or House of Representatives. Rows of small desks in a half circle face an elevated desk in the center with American flags in the background. Text on left: Pho. By Henry F. Warren, Waltham. Text on right: And with J.W. Black. Written on back of card: House of Representatives.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Riverside Ave. Spokane, Wash. (City street with low commercial buildings lining it. On the street are pedestrians and streetcars. On back of card: Riverside Ave. Spokane, Wash. Stamp: O.W. Watson Co. 02021 Division St. Phone M 8287 Spokane, Wash.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Corcoran Art Gallery. (Ornate, three-story building made of brick or stone with domed towers on the corners and a dome in the center. Text on left: Rodgers & Co. Publishers & Dealers. Stereoscopic Views. No. 359 Penna. Avenue Washington, D.C. Descriptive information on back of card: Corcoran Art Gallery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Picturesque 'Pillars of Hercules' on the grand Columbia River, Oregon, U.S.A. (Straight edge of green-covered cliffs with a wide river to the right. Large rocks, trees, and poles stick out of the water. Train tracks run along the base of the cliff. Title: 12501 Picturesque 'Pillars of Hercules' on the Grand Columbia River, Oregon, U.S.A. Copyright statement: Copyright 1904 by H.C. White Co. Text on left: H.C. White Co., Chicago, New York, London. Gen'l Office and Works, North [ ]. Text on right: The Perfect Stereograph. (Trade Mark.) [ ] April 14, 1903. Other Patents Pending.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Nescope's Mountain. (Tree-covered mountain with a few small buildings at its base and a field in front. Title: 1152 Nescope's Mountain [Nescopek Mountain?]. Text on left: C.W. Woodward, Rochester, N.Y. Text on right: Catawissa Creek Scenery, Penn'a.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Pennsylvania Avenue and Capitol. (View down a Washington, D.C. street with the United States Capitol Building at the end. Buildings and trees line the street . Descriptive information on back of card: Pennsylvania Avenue and Capitol.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Treasury Bldg. (Corner of a four-story stone building with columns surrounded by a stone-and-iron gate. Unidentifiable objects lie on the sidewalk in front. Descriptive information on back of card: Treasury Bldg.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Brumidi's allegorical painting - dome of the Capitol. March 22, 1871. (Large circle, painted in the center, with decorative elements forming a large border. It is the interior domed ceiling of the Rotunda at the U.S. Capitol. The fresco-style painting is called The Apotheosis of Washington. Descriptive information on back of card: Brumidi's Allegorical Painting - Dome of the Capitol. March 22, 1871.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Iron Works Dam. Red River. (Water falling over a stone dam. There is a shallow body of water in the foreground with trees and other plants visible in it. A person sits on the left side of the dam. Series information on back of card: Gems of Kentucky Scenery, First Series. No. 2035, Iron Works Dam, Red River.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Capitol in winter from Penn. Avenue. (View of the United States Capitol Building in winter from Pennsylvania Avenue. Snow covers the ground on either side of a sidewalk leading to the Capitol. Descriptive information on back of card: Capitol in Winter from Penn. Avenue.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Old water tower and pumping station, Chicago] (Old Water Tower and Chicago Avenue Pumping Station in Chicago, Illinois. Tall Gothic-style building with a tall tower and a smaller building with a tower or chimney to the right. A road crosses in front. The buildings are at Michigan and Chicago Avenues. The tower and pumping station were the only public buildings in the area that were not destroyed by the fire in 1871. Text on left and right: Chicago and Vicinity.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Watkins and Seneca Lake. (Edge of grassy area in front of a fence with a cluster of buildings and trees behind, followed by a body of water, with small hills on the other shore. A man stands on the grass in front of the fence, and a woman sits next to him. Title: No. 660. Watkins and Seneca Lake. Text on left: Watkins and Seneca Lake. Text on right: New York State Scenery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville Industrial Exposition 1872. (Octagonal-shaped fountain surrounded by a fence with displays and exhibitions in the background. The Louisville Exposition was held at 4th Street and Chestnut Street. Text on left: Louisville Industrial Exposition 1872. Text on right: Klauber, Photo - Cor. 3d and Jefferson Sts.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • On Sherman Creek. (Man stands on rocky bed of a creek with trees in the background. Text on back: Gems of Kentucky Scenery. No. 54 On Sherman Creek. Photographed by Carpenter & Mullen, Lexington, Ky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • New Albany, Ind. Riverfront, Bank St. to Glassworks, Winter 1879. (Snow and ice covered bank of the Ohio River with buildings and men in the background. Caption: New Albany, Ind. Riverfront, Bank St. to Glassworks, Winter 1879. On back: C. Heimberger, Photographer. 103 Pearl Street. New Albany, Ind. Handwritten on back: Ice Scenery from River Bank.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Winter view falls, Ohio River at New Albany, Jan. 1879. (Man stand on a snow covered bank at the shore of the Ohio River in New Albany, Indiana. A tower is in the background on the left. Caption: Winter View Falls, Ohio River at New Albany, Jan. 1879. Handwritten on back: Ice scenery from river bank. On back: C. Heimberger, Photographer. 103 Pearl Street. New Albany, Ind.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lower Albany or 'Egypt.' From 'Tuleus Knob' Jan'y 1882. (Distant view of New Albany below surrounded by water. Caption: Lower Albany or 'Egypt.' From 'Tuleus Knob' Jan'y 1882. Handwritten on back: Sketch of High Water from Knobs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Upper 3d St Main St. to river. Flood of Jan'y 82. (View down city street lined with buildings with water in the background. People stand on the street. Upper 3d St Main St. to River. Flood of Jan'y 82 [January 1882]. New Albany, Ind. Handwritten on back: Scenery High Water.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bunker Hill monument. (Bunker Hill Monument in Charlestown, Massachusetts. Obelisk-shaped monument made of granite with a small building next to it on a grassy area. A city skyline is in the background. Title: Bunker Hill Monument. Text on left: Boston & Suburbs. Text on right: America Illustrated. Descriptive information included on back of card: Bunker Hill Monument is situated in the city of Charlestown, and is built in the centre of the grounds which formed the breastwork of the old redoubt on Breed's Hill, its sides being parallel with the sides of the redoubt. Its height is two hundred and twenty-one feet, the material used in building, Quincy granite. The foundation is twelve feet below the surface of the ground, and is composed of six courses of stone. There are in the whole monument ninety courses, eight-four being above the surface. The base of the obelisk is thirty feet square, at the top fifteen feet. Within the shaft is a flight of two hundred and ninety-four stone steps, winding spirally. The observatory at the top is seventeen feet in height and eleven feet in diameter, and has four windows, which are provided with iron shutters. The cap stone is three feet six inches think, and four feet square at the base, weighing two and a half tons. The corner stone was laid by Lafayette, June 27, 1825, and relaid in 1827. The cap stone was put on July 23, 1842 at six o'clock, A.M. The monument was designed by Solomon Willard, Architect, and built by James Savage, costing $156,276. Mr. J.B. Goodnow is superintendent of the monument. A fee is charged to visitors ascending to the top, of twenty cents. The views from the top of the monument are justly considered among the finest in the world. They embrace Boston, Boston Harbor, its Islands, Cambridge, Roxbury, Chelsea, Somerville, Quincy, Medford, Marblehead, Dorchester, Nahant, Cape Ann, and, in clear weather, the summits of the White Mountains.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • U.S. Capitol (View from across the street, at an angle, of the U.S. Capitol Building and extension. Streetcars cross in front. Text on left: Stereoscopic Views. Text on right: Of Washington City. Descriptive information on back of card: The U.S. Capitol. The corner-stone of the original Capitol was laid September 18, 1793, by President George Washington, and was built of sandstone from Virginia. The north wing was made ready for Congress in 1800; the south in 1808. August 24, 1814, the interior of both wings was destroyed with fire by British invaders. The building was rebuilt and considered completed, including first Dome and Rotunda, in 1825. The corner-stone for the extension of the Capitol, was laid July 4, 1851, by President Fillmore. The material used for the north and south extensions is of white marble slightly tinged with blue, taken from a quarry in Lee, Massachusetts. The old Dome of the original centre building was removed in 1856, and replaced by the present stupendous iron structure. The weight of the iron is 8,909,200 pounds. The length of the Capitol is 751 feet 4 inches, and the breadth including porticoes of the extension is 824 feet. The area covered by the entire building is 153,112 square feet. The Dome is crowned by the Bronze Statue of Freedom, which weighs 14,985 pounds. The height of the Dome is 287 feet 11 inches above the base line of the building, which itself stands on a hill 90 feet above tide-water. The Rotunda is 97 feet in diameter and from its floor to the centre of the Canopy is 180 feet 3 inches. The cost of the Capitol has been about $12,500,000. [See Wyeth's Federal City.]) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Traffic in the public square and Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. (Tall building behind a city square with streets and traffic on either side. More buildings line the streets, which contain streetcars and pedestrians. The sign on the tall building includes the word 'Bank.' On the right side is another tall building with the sign 'Central National Bank.' Title: 23096 T Traffic in the Public Square and Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. Text on left: Keystone View Company. Copyrighted. Manufacturers Publishers. Made in U.S.A. Text on right: Meadville, Pa., New York, N.Y., Chicago, Ill., London, England. Text on top center: 381. Descriptive information on back of card: 23096 Traffic in Public Square and Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. We are in the very heart of Cleveland, county seat of Cuyahoga County, and fifth city in size in the United States. From the Public Square before us with its great Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument and statue of General Cleveland, radiate the principal streets of the east side of the city, and to this Square converge the principal trolley lines. Here begins the famous Euclid Avenue, for some distance occupied by business houses, but farther out a handsome residential district, shaded by elms and maples and lined with palatial private homes surrounded by spacious grounds and gardens. The skyline of the business section of the city is broken by huge skyscrapers and by large department stores. The City Hall, Post Office, Chamber of Commerce and other public buildings, as well as fine hotels which provide every convenience and comfort are nearby. In the residential sections, remote from the roar of traffic, are to be found luxurious apartment houses, handsome churches, numerous parks and gardens, and broad, well-lighted attractive drives. The situation of Cleveland, on the southern shore of Lake Erie, near the iron producing regions of the Great Lakes on the one hand, and the oil and coal of Pennsylvania on the other, has greatly favored the industrial and commercial development of the city. Some of the leading trunk lines of the railway system of the country pass through Cleveland, and there is an immense lake traffic. Many of the ore docks and lumber yards are almost hidden in the flat land bordering the Cuyahoga river, which empties into the lake. Copyright by the Keystone View Company.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C., U.S.A. (View of Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C. Wide street with streetcar tracks in the center. Pedestrians and horses and carriages are on either side with buildings lining both sides of the streets. The Capitol dome can be seen in the background. 440- Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C., U.S.A. Text on left: Keystone View Company, Manufacturers and Publishers. Text on right: Meadville, Pa. St. Louis, Mo. Descriptive information on back of card: This is the most prominent street in Washington. It extends from the White House to the Capitol, a distance of one and one-fourth miles and is as straight as an arrow. It is 160 feet wide and paved with asphaltum, at a cost to the city of over $3,000,000.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Glen Park Hotel, the tourist's home. (Large, four-story building with a two-story front porch and balcony and a tower in the center. Surrounded by manicured lawns and trees with hills in the background. Title: Glen Park Hotel, The Tourist's Home, Ten minutes walk from Depot, convenient to all places of interest & near entrance to Watkins Glen. Send for circular and analysis of these health restoring waters. Free omnibus to all trains and boats. Watkins, N.Y. C.S. Frost, Proprietor. Descriptive information on back of card: Glen Park Hotel and Tourist's Home. Magnetic and Sulphur Springs House. Watkins Glen, N.Y. Ten minutes' walk from the R.R. Depot and Steamboat Landing. This is the largest Hotel in Watkins, and the nearest entrance to the famous Watkins Glen. It is situated on the main Avenue and most convenient to all points of interest. Its broad piazzas; its easy half-flight stairways; airy and well-ventilated rooms, in suits or single, lit by gas; extensive and highly ornamented grounds, croquet lawns, and shady walks; superior springs of pure water from hillside for culinary purposes, and medicinal springs for drinking and bathing; and its excellent cuisine, render the Glen Park one of the finest hotels to all seeking for quiet, rest and relief from busy cares, or for amusement and profit by a sojourn in this region of wonderful Glens and romantic scenery. Good music in attendance for evening hops and other entertainments. Terms reduced. Send for circulars and analysis of water. The Philadelphia Keystone and Episcopal Register, remarks: 'The table of the Glen Park Hotel is strictly first-class, the location of the House is particularly convenient to every point of interest, and the attention given guests, by everyone one connected with it, is such to as to ensure the pleasure of their stay. The majority of tourists spend but a day or two at Watkins, thinking that the Glen is the only attraction, whereas a week is scarcely sufficient for the enjoyment of the cluster of Glens in its immediate vicinity, as well as the charming waters of the lake itself.' Open May to November 1880. C.S. Frost, Owner and Proprietor. Free Omnibus.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Soldiers' Home. (Two small cannons on the grounds in front of a large, white, three-story building with a four-story tower in the center. Text on left: J.F. Jarvis' Stereoscopic Views. Text on right: 135 Pa. Ave. Washington, D.C. Descriptive information on back of card: Soldiers' Home. This institution was founded after the close of the Mexican war. There are forty-eight rooms in this building, all well arranged for the comfort and convenience of the weather-beaten inmates. Upon its surroundings are several beautiful buildings, one of which was used as a summer residence by President Lincoln. The present number of inmates is about 238, all of whom are well cared for and provided with every necessary comfort of life.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Street scene in the largest city of the Mississippi Valley - Broadway, St. Louis, Mo. (View of Broadway avenue in Saint Louis, Missouri. Street with back of streetcar, horses and wagons, carriages, and pedestrians with a row of buildings on the left and wires and poles near the right. Title: (28) Street scene in the largest city of the Mississippi Valley-Broadway, St. Louis, Mo. Copyright statement: Copyright 1903 by Underwood & Underwood. Text on left: Underwood & Underwood, Publishers. New York, London, Toronto-Canada, Ottawa-Kansas. Text on right: Works and Studios. Washington, D.C. Arlington, N.J. Littleton, N.H. Descriptive information on back of card: You are facing north up Broadway, from the corner of Chestnut Street. The old Court House is just out of range at the right. The river is less than half a mile away, also at the right (east). The city extends more than five miles ahead, in the direction in which you are looking, and stretches out still farther to the west and southwest, covering sixty-two square miles. This is one of the most important streets in the business district of the city. The Custom House and the Post Office are only a few blocks ahead, and at the left. The new City Hall and the great Union Railway Stations are a few blocks still further to the left. The growth of this place in one hundred years has been something almost incredible. When the papers were signed here at St. Louis confirming the Louisiana Purchase from the French (1804), it was only a shabby frontier village, little improved beyond its original condition as a trading-post for traffic with the Indians. To-day it is the home of more than five hundred and seventy-five thousand people, and the greatest business centre in the whole Mississippi Valley. Twenty-two railway lines centre here, some of them bringing in enormous quantities of grain from the northeast, and ocean steamers come up the Mississippi to the wharves along the river at your right, bringing direct imports and carrying away American grain, beef and pork to foreign consignees. From Descriptive Bulletin No. 4, copyrighted, 1904, by Underwood & Underwood. In multiple language: Street scene in St. Louis, Mo. (Broadway).) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Great havoc wrought by a tornado, Louisville, Kentucky, U.S.A. (Close up view of debris, including twisted metal and wood, from the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Buildings with their facades damaged or completely gone are seen further down the street. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. Title: 11216- Great havoc wrought by a tornado, Louisville, Kentucky, U.S.A. Copyright Underwood & Underwood. U-55206. Text on left: Underwood & Underwood, Publishers. New York, London, Toronto-Canada, Ottawa-Kansas. Text on right: Works and Studios Arlington, N.J. Westwood. N.J. Text on top right: S 185. Descriptive information included on back of stereograph' 11216. Geography. - Louisville is on the northern boundary line of Kentucky at the falls of the Ohio River. It is sometimes called Falls City. Zone Life. - The winds of the temperate zones are rendered very irregular by being drawn into cyclones, which are constantly forming and moving eastward in various parts of these zones. Nearly all of our ordinary storms are simply the passing of these cyclones. History. - Louisville was founded in 1778 and has developed into the greatest commercial centre in Kentucky. During the first part of the Civil War the neutrality of Kentucky was respected, but on September 4, General (Bishop) Polk with a considerable force seize Columbus on the pretext that the national forces were preparing to occupy that place. The Confederate Secretary of War publicly telegraphed Polk to withdraw his troops, but President Davis telegraphed him privately to hold on, saying 'The end justifies the means.' So Columbus was held and fortified by the Confederates, while General Grant took and held Paducah, in northern Kentucky, with Federal troops, and the neutrality of Kentucky was no longer respected. About quarter past eight o'clock in the evening of March 27th, 1890, the Louisville cyclone occurred. The greatest havoc was in the west end. All the homes below Sixth Street were destroyed and from there to Fourteenth Street, on Main Street, there was a great deal of damage done. The Falls City Hall was wrecked and the roof was blown off the depot which was located at Seventh Street and the river. From this point the cyclone proceeded directly across the river to Jeffersonville, Ind., blowing down about nine blocks on the river front. In all about seventy-five people were killed in Louisville and the property loss was $500,000. In multiple languages: Great havoc wrought by a tornado, Louisville, Ky. ULPA 2000.89.17 and ULPA 2001.016.01 are duplicate images.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cabin in which Abraham Lincoln was born, Hodgensville [sic], Ky. (Replica of the cabin where Abraham Lincoln was born in Hodgenville, Kentucky. The original cabin was mostly destroyed, but a replica, built from some of the original salvaged materials, stands within the Lincoln Memorial at the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site in Hodgenville, Kentucky. Title: 16741- Cabin in Which Abraham Lincoln was Born, Hodgensville, Ky. [Hodgenville, Kentucky]. Text on left: Keystone View Company. Copyrighted. Manufacturers Publishers. Made in U.S.A. Text on right: Meadville, Pa., New York, N.Y. Portland, Oregon, London, Eng., Sydney, Aus. Text on top center: 113. Descriptive information included on back of card: 113 (16741) Birthplace of Abraham Lincoln, Hodgensville, Kentucky. Lat 38 degrees N.; Long. 86 degrees W. Here in this cabin was born one of our greatest Presidents. There is but one other who approaches him in greatness, and that was Washington. The two men were utterly different in almost every way. Washington was born of an aristocratic family and was well educated. On the other hand, Abraham Lincoln came of poor parentage. He had no early education, and he struggled hard to gain the position he finally reached. Unlike Washington, he was always a man of the common people. On September 4, 1916, the spot of ground that is here shown was set apart 'for the people of the United States forever.' The Lincoln Farm Association bought this land with the old log cabin on it. They built over the cabin a beautiful Greek temple in order to preserve it. On the date given above, the Association formally presented their gift to the United States. President Wilson, on behalf of the people of the United States, delivered a speech of acceptance. When Lincoln's father settled at this spot there were woods all about. Here the Lincoln family lived until after his mother died. Then they moved to Indiana, and finally to Illinois. When a young man he went down the Mississippi on a flat boat and made his first observations on slavery. When he went into politics, the question that stirred him most deeply was that of slavery. He debated against Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois, and gained a national reputation as a statesman. He was nominated by the Republican Party and was elected in 1861. Then followed the four years of Civil War, the most trying time that a President of the United States ever had. Just as the war was over, he was assassinated. Copyright by The Keystone View Company. ULPA 2000.89.20 is a duplicate image. Image is similar to ULPA 1999.36.142.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cumberland River and Mountains, Kentucky. (With the Cumberland River and mountains in the background, a train passes through a small town in a valley of the Cumberland River in Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cabin in which Abraham Lincoln was born, Hodgensville [sic], Ky. (Cabin where Abraham Lincoln was born in Hodgenville, Kentucky. Three men stand outside of the open door of the cabin. The original cabin was mostly destroyed, but a replica of the cabin, built from some of the original salvaged materials, stands at the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site in Hodgenville, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The birthplace of Abraham Lincoln, Hodgenville, Kentucky. (Replica of the cabin where Abraham Lincoln was born in Hodgenville, Kentucky. The original cabin was mostly destroyed, but a replica, built from some of the original salvaged materials, stands within the Lincoln Memorial at the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site in Hodgenville, Kentucky. Image is similar to ULPA 1999.36.143.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hanging tobacco in shed for curing, Lexington, Ky. (Six men unload tobacco from a wagon and hang it in a tobacco barn in Lexington, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tobacco field in Kentucky. (A man stands in a tobacco field in Kentucky with only his chest, shoulders, and head visible. He is wearing a dark hat and shirt and a lighter colored jacket. The tobacco field is quite large and farm buildings are in the distance. Title: (20092) Tobacco Field in Kentucky. Text on left: Keystone View Company. Copyrighted. Manufacturers Publishers. Made in U.S.A. Text on right: Meadville, Pa., New York, N.Y. Portland, Oregon, London, Eng., Sydney, Aus. Text on top center: 112. Descriptive information included on back of card: 112 (20092) Tobacco Field, Kentucky. Lat. 38 degrees N.; Long. 84 degrees W. The United States is by far the greatest tobacco-producing country in the world. In 1915 our country produced more than 1,000,000,000 pounds. Russia, the second important tobacco-growing country, produced in 1913, about one-fifth of this amount. Austria-Hungary and France follow in this order. Among the crops of the United States, tobacco now takes seventh rank in value. Among the crops of the world it ranks ninth in value. Tobacco is grown in many of our states. Kentucky easily leads all others in its production. In 1915 the crop of the state amounted to 356,400,000 pounds. North Carolina ranked second, with 198,400,000 pounds. Virginia came third, with 144,375,000 pounds; Ohio stood fourth, with 84,330,000 pounds; and Tennessee was fifth, with 69,675,000 pounds. Here is one of the fields in the famous Kentucky tobacco-growing district. Tobacco seeds are sown in hotbeds or in cold frames, and the small plants are set out by hand or by machines. This transplanting takes place in April, May, or June, depending on the latitude. The rows are from 3 to 4 feet apart and the plants are variously spaced in the hills. Sometimes they are set as close as 1 1/2 feet. Other times they are twice this distance apart. The young plants are cultivated just as corn is. Before the bloom appears the tops are broken out in order that the strength of the plant may be forced into leaves. The mature plants are from four to six feet high. Tobacco is harvested either by cutting the stalks or by breaking the leaves off. The leaves are hung in large barns where they are cured. You see a great number of these barns in the distance. Tobacco is a native of America. The Indians were smoking the weed when Columbus discovered the Western Continent. Copyright by The Keystone View Company. ULPA 2000.89.19 is a duplicate image.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Stone marking junction of states of Tennessee, Kentucky and Virginia in Cumberland Mountains. On line of the Louisville & Nashville R.R. (Two horse-drawn wagons, one covered and the other flatbed, sit at the junction of the states of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia in the Cumberland Mountains. Three men sit on the wagons while one man stands in front of the covered wagon. Another man stands near the wagons beside a stone marking the tri-state junction.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The Lexington Race Course--training the horses, Lexington, Ky. On line of the Queen & Crescent Ry. (Three harness racing drivers are on the Lexington race course in Kentucky. Since one is going in the opposite direction, it would appear not to be a race. A two-story grandstand and stables are in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Market St., between 10th and 11th, after tornado, Louisville, Ky. (View of rubble and debris on Market Street following the tornado that struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. Horses, carriages, and people on foot are in front of several buildings in the background that were damaged by the tornado. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. The University of Louisville Photographic Archives houses another copy of this stereograph as Image Number ULPA 2003.039.01.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Henry Diehl. (Henry Diehl sits at a desk writing on a piece of paper with a pen. An inkwell sits next to his hand.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Beu Hibe. (Beu (or possibly Beau) Hibe is pictured as a young man in formal attire.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • High Bridge scenery--approach to the bridge, distant view, High Bridge, Ky. On line of the Queen & Crescent Ry. (Train on railroad tracks leading toward one of the towers of High Bridge over the Kentucky River. The tracks are cut between cliffs and both towers are seen in the background. The north and south towers were built between 1854 and 1858 by bridge builder John A. Roebling to suspend wire cables across the bridge. The towers stood unused for twenty years until High Bridge was completed in 1877. They were demolished in 1929 to allow for widening of the tracks.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Oldest tavern in Kentucky associated with Andrew Jackson, Aaron Burr. (A man in a stovepipe hat stands posing among broken fences in front of a log structure. The handwritten caption on the back of the image indicates that this is the oldest tavern in Kentucky, possibly in Boyle County or Nelson County.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [River scene] (Several farms and farmland adjacent to a river possibly in Kentucky or Tennessee. A steep ridge follows the river in the background. Wooden rafts float next to the shoreline.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The mirror. (Three men sit next to a small pool of water which reflects their images and the surrounding landscape. A dry stone wall stands at the top of the cliff above them.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cutting tobacco, Kentucky, U.S.A. (Several men cut tobacco in a field in Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Fern Grove, near Charlestown, Ind.] (A man stands fishing at the mouth of Fourteen Mile Creek, a creek in Clark County, Indiana, with the Ohio River in the background. It is so named because it is fourteen miles away from the Falls of the Ohio. The area was known as Fern Grove in the 1880s, and was mostly used as a church camp.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bridge [over Elkhorn Creek] (Men and women walk across a narrow wooden bridge, possibly over Elkhorn Creek in Kentucky. The bridge is supported by stone columns and has no railings. A house and several large buildings are in the background. A wooded landscape surrounds the scene.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 10th and Market Sts., Louisville, Ky. (Wide angle view of Tenth Street and Market Street following the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. A horse-drawn tram sits in the middle of the street, with piles of debris along the sidewalks in front of buildings on both sides of the street. Men and women are standing in the foreground, presumably waiting for the tram. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • N.E. 11th & Main St. (Buildings and debris along Main Street following the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Several horse drawn trams, a horse and carriage, and people are on the street. Several power poles line the street. There were many tobacco warehouses located on Main Street, including Planters' tobacco warehouse, which is pictured. Planters', owned by J.S. Phelps, was located at 1027-1029 West Main Street. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville & Nashville R.R. Bridge over Ohio River, Cincinnati, Ohio. On line of the Louisville & Nashville R.R. (Two electric streetcars pass over the Ohio River on the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Bridge in Cincinnati, Ohio. Several detached wagons sit on the banks below the bridge in the foreground.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Views of Cave Hill Cemetery, Louisville, Ky. Howard F. Christy. (Monument for Howard Christy in Cave Hill Cemetery in Louisville, Kentucky. Thought to have been taken around 1871, this is the earliest known view of Cave Hill Cemetery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • R.O. James' mountain wagon, Ky. (Horse-drawn wagon with tarp in the curve of a mountain road, possibly in Kentucky. Two teams of horses are drawing the wagon and the driver is sitting on the team closest to the wagon. A man stands behind the wagon resting against it. Another man stands on a rocky ledge on the other side of the road.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville miracle. Statue of the Holy Virgin standing uninjured in wreck of Church of Sacred Heart. (A large stone statue of the Virgin Mary stands seemingly undamaged amid the wreckage caused by the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. Sacred Heart Church was located at 1629 W. Broadway.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Roasting pigs at the great barbecue, G.A.R. encampment, Louisville, Ky., U.S.A. (Several men stand holding pigs to roast above a roasting pit during the encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic in Louisville, Kentucky in 1895. Two pigs are roasting in the pit. Title: Roasting Pigs at the Great Barbecue, G.A.R. [Grand Army of the Republic] Encampment, Louisville, Ky., U.S.A. Copyright, 1895, by Strohmeyer & Wyman. Text on left: Strohmeyer & Wyman, Publishers, New York, N.Y. Text on right: Sold only by Underwood & Underwood New York, London, Toronto-Canada, Ottawa-Kansas. ULPA 2000.89.14 is a duplicate image.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scenery in Chickamauga Nat. Park -- Kentucky State Monument, Chickamauga Park, Oh. On line of the Queen & Crescent Ry. (A horse and carriage pass by the Kentucky Monument in the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park in northern Georgia and eastern Tennessee. The granite monument was dedicated May 4, 1899.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Log rafts on river] (Building with smokestack sitting on a small hill above the bank of an unknown river, possibly in Tennessee or Kentucky. A dock leads down to the river with several wood rafts floating in front of the bank. Farmland surrounds the building and can also be seen on the opposite side of the river.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • In the camp of the 3d Kentucky volunteers, Newport News, Va. (Soldiers from the 3rd Regiment of the Kentucky Volunteer Infantry at a Newport News, Virginia encampment. Soldiers are lined up in double rows with rifles in firing position. Small white tents are on either side of the soldiers. Several other soldiers are standing behind and in front of the row of infantry.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Middlesborough Hotel at Middlesborough, Ky. (Hand-tinted image of the Middlesborough Hotel in Middlesborough, Kentucky. This four-story hotel had approximately 100 rooms. It is no longer in existence.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Clay monument, Lexington, Ky. (Monument to Henry Clay, U.S. Senator and Representative from Kentucky, in the Lexington Cemetery, in Lexington, Kentucky. The limestone monument was erected in 1857. The monument is framed by trees, and a person is standing near the base.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View of Victorian era house] (A woman stands in front of a Victorian era house surrounded by a wrought iron fence, possibly in Boyd County, Kentucky or Ironton, Ohio. A plank sidewalk is in front of the house and unused planks lie in the yard.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville, Ky. "Caught out on a fly." Wild swan killed by the tornado. On line of the N.Y.C. & H.R.R.R. (A dead swan lies on the ground in front of a twisted tree and limbs. Two damaged buildings are in the background. The damage was caused by the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. Caption reads "On line of N.Y.C. [New York Central] and H.R.R.R. [Hudson River Railroad Company].") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Wreck of central tobacco warehouse. (Several horses and carriages are on the street in front of piles of debris and the remains of a tobacco warehouse. The damage was done by the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Ruins of St. John's Church and rectory. (The wall of the front of St. John's Church is left standing while the rest of the church and rectory are gone, following the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. St. John's Church, located at 1115 W. Jefferson, was built in 1847. Both the Rector, Steven Elliott Barnwell, and his infant son, died as a result of the tornado. Several people can be seen viewing the wreckage, and piles of stones and tree limbs are in the foreground. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Baxter Park. (View of Baxter Square Park, including many damaged trees, after the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. A gazebo sits, seemingly unharmed, amidst the debris, broken trees, and damaged buildings. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. Baxter Square Park, purchased in 1880, was the first park in Louisville, Kentucky. This image can also be found as Image Number P00862 in the R. G. Potter Collection, University of Louisville Photographic Archives.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville Tornado. Entrance to Baxter Square--3 inch iron rods bent and sign torn away. (Two men and four boys stand in the street in front of the entrance gate at Baxter Square Park. Iron bars are bent over from the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Damaged homes sit across the street. Purchased in 1880, Baxter Park was the first park in Louisville, Kentucky. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Union Depot, Louisville, Ky. (Debris, train sheds and a tilted passenger train car at Union Depot following the tornado. Union Depot, located at Seventh Street and River, was demolished by the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Dr. Griffith's home and office, Louisville, Ky. (The remains of Dr. George W. Griffith's house and office, located at 1121 and 1125 West Jefferson Street, after the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Fall [i.e., Falls] City Hall, 11 & 12 Market St. (Wreckage of Falls City Hall, with horses, carriages, and people in the foreground, following the tornado which struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. There were over 200 people in the building when it collapsed, and while accounts vary, at least 55 people died. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Corner 13th and Walnut Sts., Louisville, Ky. (Men and women standing in front of a damaged building, probably Oddfellows Hall, following the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Wreck of Falls City Hall, (75 killed). (People standing on the wreckage of Falls City Hall, Louisville, Kentucky, following the tornado which struck on March 27, 1890. There were over 200 people in the building when it collapsed, and while accounts vary, at least 55 people died. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Market Street, Louisville, Kentucky] (View of rubble and debris in the street following the tornado that struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. Horses, carriages, and people on foot are in front of several buildings in the background that were damaged by the tornado. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Cash residence--Madison Street. 9 inmates, not one killed or injured. (A man stands in front of a house on Madison Street destroyed by the tornado that struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado, Wreck of Louisville tobacco warehouse. (View of the debris from the remains of at least one tobacco warehouse, located on West Main, following the tornado that struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. Ruined buildings and an intact smokestack are in the background. A tall utility pole stands in the foreground with several men milling below on the street. Many of these warehouses were destroyed by the tornado of 1890 but were quickly rebuilt. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Union Depot. (The remains of Union Depot, located at Seventh Street and River, which was demolished by the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Union Depot. (The remains of Union Depot, located at Seventh Street and River, which was demolished by the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. People are standing in front of and on top of a collapsed train shed. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Falls City Hall. (Wreckage of Falls City Hall, following the tornado which struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. People are standing on the wreckage. There were over 200 people in the building when it collapsed, and while accounts vary, at least 55 people died. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Falls City Hall, Louisville, Ky. (Wreckage of Falls City Hall following the tornado which struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. People are standing on the wreckage. There were over 200 people in the building when it collapsed, and while accounts vary, at least 55 people died. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. General view--Market Street. (Bricks and rubble from damaged buildings lie in Market Street following the tornado which struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. A sign advertising "Montgomery & Bailey's," a candy manufacturer located at 1018 W. Market Street, sits in front of a building. Several men stand on the sidewalk between buildings and debris. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Union Depot, Louisville, Ky. (The remains of Union Depot, located at Seventh Street and River, which was demolished by the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. People are standing in front of and on top of a collapsed train shed. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Tornado-damaged building, Louisville, Ky.] (Building damaged by the tornado which struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. The roof and the second floor, particularly the windows, are severely damaged. Several people are standing on the street in front of the building. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Rear, Union Depot. (Rear portion of Union Depot, located at Seventh Street and River, which was demolished by the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Odd Fellows' Hall, after tornado, Louisville, Ky. (Wreckage of Odd Fellows Hall following the tornado which struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. The top story is collapsed, and debris is spread around the building. Three people appear to be repairing the street, while another is walking on the opposite side of the road. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. Originally called Eclipse Hall, the building opened in 1872 at 1230 West Walnut Street as a market and saloon. In 1885, the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows bought the building and renamed it Odd Fellows Hall. The building was rebuilt following the tornado.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Wreck of Eclipse Hall. (Wreckage of Odd Fellows Hall following the tornado which struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. The top story is collapsed, and debris is spread around the building. A pile of bricks and iron rods are in the foreground. Originally called Eclipse Hall, the building opened in 1872 at 1230 West Walnut Street as a market and saloon. In 1885, the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows bought the building and renamed it Odd Fellows Hall. The building was rebuilt following the tornado. ULPA 2003.03.01 is a duplicate image.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • B'dy between 16th and 17th, Louisville, Ky. (Row of damaged houses on Broadway between Sixteenth and Seventeenth Streets in Louisville, Kentucky following the tornado which struck on March 27, 1890. Several men stand on top of one of the houses and two small groups of women are standing on the sidewalk in front. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 18th and Market St., Louisville, Ky. (People are standing in front of debris and buildings in the area of Eighteenth Street and Market Street. The buildings were damaged by the tornado which struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ent. Baxter Square. (Damaged trees in Baxter Square Park, following the tornado that hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. A multi-story building stands in the background. Baxter Square Park, purchased in 1880, was the first park in Louisville, Kentucky. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Vic. of Baxter Square. (Three buildings in the vicinity of Baxter Square Park that were severely damaged by the tornado which struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. The roofs are gone from two of the buildings. People stand amidst the rubble in front of the buildings, and a horse and carriage are parked on the street. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Rear Phoenix warehouse. (Damaged rear of Phoenix Storage Co., located from 910-928 West Main Street. The building was damaged by the tornado which struck Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Baxter Square--trees uprooted. (The corner of Baxter Square Park showing uprooted trees after the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. Two men stand in front of the iron fence surrounding the park. Rubble and damaged buildings sit along the street in the background. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. Baxter Square Park, purchased in 1880, was the first park in Louisville, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tobacco ware house, Louisville, Ky. (Pile of bricks, rubble, and debris from a severely damaged warehouse following the tornado which hit Louisville, Ky. on March 27, 1890. Other buildings sit in the background. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Main St., between 8th and 9th, Louisville, Ky. (Aerial view of a building with a collapsed roof and full of rubble and debris following the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. The building, possibly a tobacco warehouse, was located on Main Street between Eighth Street and Ninth Street. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Vic. of 9th & Main. (Street scene in the vicinity of Ninth Street and Main Street following the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. Several horses and carriages are parked or travelling down the street among the damaged buildings. There were many tobacco warehouses located on Main Street which were damaged. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 9th and Main Sts., looking west, Louisville, Ky. (Damaged buildings following the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Horses and wagons jam the street, with those in the foreground carrying hogsheads. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. There were many tobacco warehouses located on Main Street which were damaged.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 10th and Main Sts., looking East, Louisville, Ky. (Row of buildings damaged by the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Men are walking in the street which is littered with debris. A power pole leans against one of the buildings. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. There were many tobacco warehouses located on Main Street which were damaged.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 10th and Main Sts., looking west, Louisville, Ky. (Rooftop view of damaged buildings along Main Street, with piles of debris in the foreground following the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. There were many tobacco warehouses located on Main Street, and many of these were damaged. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Corner of 11th and Market Streets. (Men stand perilously close to a structure with the roof collapsed following the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Men and women are on the sidewalk walking past other damaged buildings at the corner of Eleventh Street and Market Street. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Market bet. 10th and 11th. (Front of a building on Market Street between Tenth Street and Eleventh Street that was damaged by the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. The walls of the building have been peeled away, so that the inside rooms of the three story structure are visible. A man sits among the rubble and another man is standing on a ladder propped against the building a few feet from him. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 10th and Main Sts., looking east, Louisville, Ky. (Buildings along Main Street damaged by the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. There were many tobacco warehouses located on Main Street, and many of these were damaged. Men are walking in the street which is littered with debris on both sides. Two power poles can be seen. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Main St., between 11th and 12th, Louisville, Ky. (Piles of the remains of several buildings following the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Part of the front wall of one building facing the street is standing with the word "Louisville" painted across what was the exterior of the second floor. There were many tobacco warehouses located on Main Street, and many of these were damaged. A smoke stack stands above the wreckage in the background. A horse and carriage with hogsheads sits in the foreground. The Ohio River and the Fourteenth Street Bridge are in the background. A train is crossing the bridge. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Main Street, between Eleventh and Twelfth. (Piles of the remains of several buildings following the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Part of the front wall of one building facing the street is standing with the word "Louisville" painted across what was the exterior of the second floor. There were many tobacco warehouses located on Main Street, and many of these were damaged. A smoke stack stands above the wreckage in the background. A horse and carriage with hogsheads sits in the foreground. The Ohio River and the Fourteenth Street Bridge are in the background. A train is crossing the bridge. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 12th and Jefferson Sts., Louisville, Ky. (A loose crowd stands along Jefferson Street, while a horse-drawn tram passes on the road. Buildings damaged by the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890, stand on the other side of the street. On the near side of the street, one tree stands undamaged, while another tree lies next to it with its branches spread across the street. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 15th and Chestnut Sts., Louisville, Ky. (Trees, debris, and buildings in the vicinity of Fifteenth Street and Chestnut Street that were damaged by the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Two women are in the street in the foreground. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 15th St., looking north, Louisville, Ky. (Men walk down Fifteenth Street between piles of debris and tree limbs on the near side of the street. On the opposite side of the street are buildings severely damaged by the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky on March 27, 1890. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 16th and Chestnut Sts., Louisville, Ky. (An African American man is leaning against a piece of fence standing between structures that have been completely destroyed by the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Other damaged buildings are in the background in the vicinity of Sixteenth Street and Chestnut Street. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Scene of destruction--Chapel Street. (A group of people, including several children and a man holding a baby, stand amidst the wreckage of a home in Louisville destroyed by the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Two trees stand in front of the house on Chapel Street, and other damaged buildings are in the background. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Main Street--after the zephyr. (Large pile of bricks from buildings damaged in the tornado, which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Damaged buildings, a horse and carriage, and a horse tram are along Main Street in the background. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville tornado. Where "ruin's merciless ploughshare passed o'er." (Large building damaged during the tornado, which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. The roof has collapsed, and debris litters the street in front of the building. Many other damaged buildings are in the background. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Phelps ware house. (Planters' tobacco warehouse, owned by J.S. Phelps, was located at 1027-1029 West Main Street. The building, along with other tobacco warehouses on Main Street, was damaged by the tornado which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. People are in front of the building, with debris lying in the street. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. Image is a copy of a stereograph.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 9th St. looking north, Louisville, Ky. (Buildings along Ninth Street damaged during the tornado, which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. The Ohio River is in the background. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. Image is a copy of a stereograph.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Corner 8th and Main Sts., Louisville, Ky. (Debris from buildings damaged during the tornado, which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Other damaged buildings, located at the corner of Eighth Street and Main Street, are in the background. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. Image is a copy of a stereograph.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 8th St. and the river, Louisville, Ky. (Debris in front of buildings on Eighth Street damaged during the tornado, which hit Louisville, Kentucky, on March 27, 1890. Several people and a horse and carriage walk among the rubble in the street. The tornado killed an estimated 100 people and many more were injured. Image is a copy of a stereograph.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View unfinished work from top of 370 feet span. (Aerial view of the construction of the Fourteenth Street Bridge designed by Albert Fink. This truss drawbridge was built by the Louisville Bridge and Iron Company and spans the Ohio River, between Louisville, Kentucky and Clarksville, Indiana. Started in 1867, the first train crossed the bridge in February 1870. The Fourteenth Street Bridge was previously called the Panhandle Bridge.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Canal draw, 264 ft. long. (Construction of the canal draw of the Fourteenth Street Bridge designed by Albert Fink. The draw span is across the upstream end of the Louisville and Portland Canal. This truss drawbridge was built by the Louisville Bridge and Iron Company and spans the Ohio River, between Louisville, Kentucky and Clarksville, Indiana. Started in 1867, the first train crossed the bridge in February 1870. The Fourteenth Street Bridge was previously called the Panhandle Bridge.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • End view of canal draw. (Construction of the canal draw of the Fourteenth Street Bridge designed by Albert Fink. Two men stand on top of the partially constructed draw span which is across the upstream end of the Louisville and Portland Canal. This truss drawbridge was built by the Louisville Bridge and Iron Company and spans the Ohio River, between Louisville, Kentucky and Clarksville, Indiana. Started in 1867, the first train crossed the bridge in February 1870. The Fourteenth Street Bridge was previously called the Panhandle Bridge.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Pier no. 13 (in construction). (Construction of pier 13 of the Fourteenth Street Bridge designed by Albert Fink. This truss drawbridge was built by the Louisville Bridge and Iron Company and spans the Ohio River, between Louisville, Kentucky and Clarksville, Indiana. Started in 1867, the first train crossed the bridge in February 1870. The Fourteenth Street Bridge was previously called the Panhandle Bridge.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • End view of falsework 370 feet span. (End view of the construction of the Fourteenth Street Bridge designed by Albert Fink. Several men stand and sit on the unfinished bridge. This truss drawbridge was built by the Louisville Bridge and Iron Company and spans the Ohio River, between Louisville, Kentucky and Clarksville, Indiana. Started in 1867, the first train crossed the bridge in February 1870. The Fourteenth Street Bridge was previously called the Panhandle Bridge.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ohio River Bridge with draw open. (Two men stand looking at the Ohio River and Fourteenth Street Bridge. The bridge was designed by Albert Fink and built by the Louisville Bridge and Iron Company and spans the Ohio River, between Louisville, Kentucky and Clarksville, Indiana. Started in 1867, the first train crossed the bridge in February 1870. The Fourteenth Street Bridge was previously called the Panhandle Bridge.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Reminiscence : the story of the empty sleeve. G.A.R. encampment, Louisville, Ky. (Members of the Grand Army of the Republic sit talking among tents at an encampment in Louisville, Kentucky in 1895. In the center sits a soldier who obviously lost an arm during the Civil War.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Water works. (The Water Tower in Louisville, Kentucky. It is the oldest ornamental water tower in the world, and began operating in 1860.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Top of cliff, Fern Grove. (A man is standing on Devil's Backbone, a rock formation and peninsula formed by the flow of Fourteen Mile Creek into the Ohio River. A group of people are further up on the rock formation. Devil's Backbone is currently situated outside Charlestown State Park near Charlestown, Indiana.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • German Catholic church, cor. of Wall and Maple St., Jeffersonville, Ind., 1883. (Homes and a German Catholic Church at the corner of Wall Street and Maple Street in Jeffersonville, Indiana sit surrounded by flood waters from the flood that occurred in February 1883. Men in boats are in the foreground.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Peachie Schleuk. (A baby picture of Peachie Schleuk.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Spring St. near depot, Jeffersonville, Indiana, February 1883. (Men sit in boats in front of a row of houses on Spring Street, near the depot, in Jeffersonville, Indiana, during the flood that occurred in February 1883.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Birds eye view of Louisville. Looking north-west, from tower of City Hall. (Aerial view of buildings in downtown Louisville, Kentucky, probably in the mid-to-late 1880s. The Ohio River and the Fourteenth Street Bridge are in the background. The storefront views are of Market Street.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Birds eye view of Louisville. Looking north-east, from tower of City Hall. (Aerial view of buildings in downtown Louisville, Kentucky, probably in the mid-to-late 1880s. The Ohio River is in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View of Fourth Street. (A row of businesses at the corner of Fourth Street and Jefferson Street in Louisville, Kentucky. Several of the storefronts have awnings and "watches and jewelry" is printed on the first awning on the street. George Wolf, whose name is on the building above the awning, was the owner of this jewelry store.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Birds eye view of Louisville from tower of City Hall] (Aerial view of buildings in downtown Louisville, Kentucky, probably in the mid-to-late 1880s. The Ohio River and the Fourteenth Street Bridge are in the background. The storefront views are of Market Street.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Galt House. (The Galt House Hotel at the corner of First Street and Main Street in Louisville, Kentucky. This building, the hotel's second location, was built in 1869, closed in 1919, and demolished in 1921. The hotel reopened in another location in 1973. Several carriages are on the street in front of the hotel alongside interurban tracks.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Court house & city hall. (City Hall and Court House on Jefferson Street in Louisville, Kentucky around 1874. Several carriages are in the street alongside interurban tracks. Men and women are standing on the sidewalk outside the courthouse grounds.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville Industrial Exposition. (Aerial view of the interior of the Louisville Industrial Exposition which began in Louisville, Kentucky, at the corner of Fourth Street and Chestnut Street in 1872. A man sits on a bench next to a large fountain surrounded by shrubs and statuary.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Courier Journal office. (The Courier Journal/Will Sales building at the southeast corner of Fourth Street and Green Street (now Liberty Street) in Louisville, Kentucky. A statue of George Prentice, a former editor of the newspaper, stands above the main entrance to the building. Large awnings line the building on Fourth Street. The building was demolished in 1979.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Methodist Church, Broadway, Louisville Ky. (West Broadway Methodist Church on Broadway, between Brook Street and Floyd Street in Louisville, Kentucky. The church was established in 1867 and moved from its former location to Brownsboro Road in Louisville, Kentucky in 1955.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Court house. (The Court House at 601 West Jefferson Street in Louisville, Kentucky. Several carriages are parked in the street and men and women stand on the sidewalk around the perimeter of the courthouse.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View on Broadway, between 4th and 5th Sts., Louisville, Ky. (Façade of buildings on Broadway between Fourth Street and Fifth Street in Louisville, Kentucky. A wide brick sidewalk sits between a row of trees and a wrought iron fence in front of the houses. Caption: 74. View on Broadway, between 4th and 5th Sts., Louisville, Ky. ULPA 2000.155.01 is a duplicate image.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Fifth Ave. Hotel & cathedral. (Fifth Avenue Hotel on Fifth Street in Louisville, Kentucky. The Cathedral of the Assumption sits in the background at 443 South Fifth Street. A carriage is parked under a tree on the opposite side of the road.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Church, Louisville, Ky.] (Towers and spires of a church in Louisville, Kentucky, with a fraction of the rest of the building visible. One person is standing in the street in front of the church, while another is standing on the opposite sidewalk. Trees line the sidewalk on both sides of the street.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View of Broadway. (Buildings along Broadway in Louisville, Kentucky. Trees line the sidewalk in front of the buildings, while the foreground is dominated by Broadway. In the 1870s Broadway was considered a suburb with many large residences. By the end of this decade it was the longest street in the city.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville Female High School. (The Louisville Female High School, located on First Street, in Louisville, Kentucky, opened in 1856 but moved to this location in 1864, where a new structure was built for it in 1873. People are standing around the front of the building.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Louisville City Hall, Ky.] (Built between 1870 and 1873, the Louisville City Hall was designed by John Andrewartha and C.S Mergell. It is located at 601 West Jefferson Street in Louisville, Kentucky. Prominent features of the building are the clock tower and the symbolic carvings on the building.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Broadway Baptist Church, rededicated November 12, 1876. (Founded in 1870, the Broadway Baptist Church was built originally on Broadway between First Street and Brook Street and the first worship services were held in the sanctuary in May 1872. The last service was held in May 1948 at this location, and a new building was built at its current location on Brownsboro Road in Louisville, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Daniel Boone's monument at Frankfort, Ky. (Monument for Daniel Boone in the Frankfort Cemetery in Franklin County, Kentucky. Boone died in 1820 in Missouri, but his and his wife's remains were reinterred in Kentucky in 1845. ULPA 1999.36.91 is a duplicate image on a yellow card.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Monument to Richard Mentor Johnson, Frankfort, Ky.] (Monument to Richard Mentor Johnson in the Frankfort Cemetery in Franklin County, Kentucky. Johnson served in both the House and Senate of the United States, and was elected Vice-President of the United States in 1837. His birth year on the monument is 1781, but scholars have revised his birth year to 1780.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • State monument. Frankfort, Ky. (Commissioned in 1848 by the Kentucky State Legislature, this monument to honor Kentucky veterans of all wars was built by Robert E. Launitz of New York. It was brought by barge to Frankfort, Kentucky, and completed in 1850. Only the top of the monument is visible through the trees. It is located in the middle of the Frankfort Cemetery in Franklin County, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View cemetery. Frankfort, Ky. Mrs. Wingate lot. (Tall monument, with the name Campbell etched on it, in the Frankfort Cemetery in Franklin County, Kentucky, surrounded by several smaller monuments and grave markers. This is the Sawyier-Wingate family plot, but the stereograph was made before Paul Sawyier was buried in the plot. A gate encloses the area with trees in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Frankfort, from cemetery hill. (The city of Frankfort viewed from the Frankfort Cemetery, in Franklin County, Kentucky. The Kentucky River winds past the city, and barges are lined up on the Frankfort shoreline.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Devil's umbrella, near Frankfort. (Devil's Umbrella, a rock cliff, overlooks the Kentucky River. Part of Frankfort, Kentucky is visible to the right of the Kentucky River.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Devil's umbrella, Frankfort. (Devil's Umbrella, a rock cliff, overlooks the Kentucky River. Part of Frankfort, Kentucky is visible to the right of the Kentucky River.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cemetery walk, near Frankfort. (The Frankfort Cemetery, in Franklin County, Kentucky, was Kentucky's first picturesque cemetery. Land for the cemetery was purchased in 1845, and Robert Carmichael was hired to do the landscaping. A man is sitting on the cliff adjacent to a walk which stops at a wooden gate and stone wall. One of two very dramatic features of the original plan, the walk is now gone.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Petrified rock near Frankfort, Kentucky. (A rock formation near Frankfort, Kentucky. Bushes and tree limbs lie on the ground and against the rocks.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tunnel, Frankfort, Ky. (Built by the Lexington and Ohio Railroad Company in 1848, the tunnel allowed trains to travel directly into Frankfort, Kentucky. Railroad tracks lead into the tunnel, and the steep cliff of the adjacent mountain clearly illustrates the engineering feat that was required. A portion of a brick structure is adjacent to the tunnel entrance and opposite the cliff.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky River valley, above Frankfort. (Colorized image of the Kentucky River valley with a portion of the Devil's Umbrella in the left corner of the image. Adjacent to the river is an expanse of farmland with trees along the river. ULPA 1999.36.103 is a duplicate image with photographer and series information.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Perspective view looking through towers from north side. (North tower of High Bridge over the Kentucky River. The railroad tracks beneath the tower lead across the river to where the south tower can be seen in the distance. The north and south towers were built between 1854 and 1858 by bridge builder John A. Roebling to suspend wire cables across the bridge. The towers stood unused for twenty years until High Bridge was completed in 1877. They were demolished in 1929 to allow for widening of the tracks.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Pier no. 1.--end view, from old orchard. (Pier no. 1 on the north side of the Kentucky River during construction of High Bridge. At the base of the steel pier are several small wooden buildings and the remains of an old orchard. Two piers anchored in concrete support the three 375 foot spans of the bridge on either side of the river. High Bridge is 275.5 feet above the low water mark, 1125 feet long, and is reported to be the first cantilever bridge in North America. A portion of one of the steel spans can be seen partially connected to the top of the pier.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Half of span no. 1 as it reached wooden pier, from river bottom opposite. (Pier no. 1, half of its steel span, the cliff face, and north tower as viewed from the opposite river bank during construction of High Bridge over the Kentucky River. Two piers anchored in concrete support the three 375 foot spans of the bridge on either side of the river. High Bridge is 275.5 feet above the low water mark, 1125 feet long, and is reported to be the first cantilever bridge in North America.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Perspective view of bridge from north side, January 23, 1877. (High Bridge and the Kentucky River from the north side of the bridge. The bridge is complete with the exception of the center span. Several men are standing on top of the bridge. Two piers anchored in concrete support the three 375 foot spans of the bridge on either side of the river. High Bridge is 275.5 feet above the low water mark, 1125 feet long, and is reported to be the first cantilever bridge in North America.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • North tower from south side of river before bridge was built. (Early image of the north tower of High Bridge prior to the bridge's construction. The cliff face and Kentucky River below are seen from the south side of the river. The north and south towers were built between 1854 and 1858 by bridge builder John A. Roebling to suspend wire cables across the bridge. The towers stood unused for twenty years until High Bridge was completed in 1877. They were demolished in 1929 to allow for widening of the tracks.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Half of span no.1 as it reached wooden pier, from above the ferry. (Pier no. 1, half of its steel span, the cliff face, and north tower as viewed from Shaker Ferry during construction of High Bridge over the Kentucky River. Two piers anchored in concrete support the three 375 foot spans of the bridge on either side of the river. High Bridge is 275.5 feet above the low water mark, 1125 feet long, and is reported to be the first cantilever bridge in North America.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Finished bridge from mouth of Dix River. (High Bridge over the Kentucky River as viewed from the confluence of the Kentucky River and Dix River. Three men on a small boat are in the foreground by the riverbank. A camera and tripod are on the bank above the men and pointed toward the bridge. A train is crossing the bridge on the center span. Two piers anchored in concrete support the three 375 foot spans of the bridge on either side of the river. High Bridge is 275.5 feet above the low water mark, 1125 feet long, and is reported to be the first cantilever bridge in North America. The University of Louisville Photographic Archives houses another copy of this stereograph as Image Number ULPA 1999.36.110a (Cincinnati Southern Railway series, no. 18).) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • High Bridge scenery--great tower of the old bridge near High Bridge, Ky. On line of the Queen & Crescent Ry. (One of the two towers of High Bridge over the Kentucky River. A man stands next to the tower near a fence. The Kentucky River and cliffs above it are in the background. The north and south towers were built between 1854 and 1858 by bridge builder John A. Roebling to suspend wire cables across the bridge. The towers stood unused for twenty years until High Bridge was completed in 1877. They were demolished in 1929 to allow for widening of the tracks.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Showing progress of construction, January 22, 1877, from mouth of Dix River. (Construction of High Bridge over the Kentucky River as viewed from the confluence of the Kentucky River and Dix River. A small boat is in the foreground by the riverbank. The bridge is complete with the exception of the center span. Two piers anchored in concrete support the three 375 foot spans of the bridge on either side of the river. High Bridge is 275.5 feet above the low water mark, 1125 feet long, and is reported to be the first cantilever bridge in North America.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Perspective view of finished bridge from south side. (High Bridge over the Kentucky River viewed from the south side. The bridge is complete and a crowd of men are standing on top it. One man leans against the steel bridge near where it connects to the cliff. Two piers anchored in concrete support the three 375 foot spans of the bridge on either side of the river. High Bridge is 275.5 feet above the low water mark, 1125 feet long, and is reported to be the first cantilever bridge in North America.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • East view looking south. (High Bridge and the Kentucky River from the north side of the bridge. Two piers anchored in concrete support the three 375 foot spans of the bridge on either side of the river. High Bridge is 275.5 feet above the low water mark, 1125 feet long, and is reported to be the first cantilever bridge in North America.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Span no.1--half of span no. 2 and pier no. 1. (Pier no. 1, span no. 1, half of span no. 2, the cliff face, and north tower as viewed from the riverbank downstream during construction of High Bridge over the Kentucky River. Two piers anchored in concrete support the three 375 foot spans of the bridge on either side of the river. High Bridge is 275.5 feet above the low water mark, 1125 feet long, and is reported to be the first cantilever bridge in North America.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Looking through interior of bridge from north side. (The interior of High Bridge looking from the north to the south side. The Kentucky River is below. Two piers anchored in concrete support the three 375 foot spans of the bridge on either side of the river. High Bridge is 275.5 feet above the low water mark, 1125 feet long, and is reported to be the first cantilever bridge in North America.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • South tower from Tiernay's. (Distant view of the south tower of High Bridge over the Kentucky River. A small wooden structure and debris are on the ground at eye-level. The north and south towers were built between 1854 and 1858 by bridge builder John A. Roebling to suspend wire cables across the bridge. The towers stood unused for twenty years until High Bridge was completed in 1877. They were demolished in 1929 to allow for widening of the tracks.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • High Bridge scenery--distant view from the bridge of the river, High Bridge, Ky. On line of the Queen & Crescent Ry. (Panoramic view of the Kentucky River valley from High Bridge, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Shaker Ferry Road. (Two men stand on Shaker Ferry Road above a stone wall with a cliff behind them. Shaker Ferry Road is located in present-day Mercer County in Shakertown at Pleasant Hill. The road, which was began in 1826 and completed in 1861, was used by the Shaker community for trade on the Kentucky River.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ashland residence of H. Clay. (South side of the Henry Clay mansion, located in Lexington, Kentucky and completed by Henry Clay's son in 1857. Henry Clay was a U.S. Senator and Representative from Kentucky. Several people stand in front of the brick Italianate style house. Small trees and grass are in the foreground. A small part of one of the two brick ice houses, built around 1830, is visible.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ashland, front. (Front of the Henry Clay mansion, located in Lexington, Kentucky, and completed by Henry Clay's son in 1857. Henry Clay was a U.S. Senator and Representative from Kentucky. Several people, and a horse and carriage are in front of the brick Italianate style house. Tall trees obscure parts of the house.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ashland, favorite walk of H. Clay. (The Henry Clay walk through the rear lawn of Ashland, Clay's estate, in Lexington, Kentucky. Henry Clay was a U.S. Senator and Representative from Kentucky. A man in a suit with a cane stands in the middle of the path, while large pine and canopy trees, surrounded by flowers and grass, tower over the path.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Henry Clay] Monument, Lexington Cemetery, Lexington, Ky. (Monument to Henry Clay, U.S. Senator and Representative from Kentucky, in the Lexington Cemetery, in Lexington, Kentucky. The limestone monument was erected in 1857. The monument is framed by trees, and a dirt road curves in front of the small hill on which the monument stands.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lover's walk near Oil Springs. (A path winds between tall trees and a hill covered with foliage and bushes near Oil Springs, Kentucky, in Johnson County.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Rock house, Sublimity Springs Road, Kentucky. (A fallen tree rests against a large rock cliff which is adjacent to a clearing. An indentation at the base of the cliff makes a "rock house." Green trees are in the background. Location may possibly be in Laurel County, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cemetery walk, near Frankfort, Kentucky. (The Frankfort Cemetery, in Franklin County, Kentucky, was Kentucky's first picturesque cemetery. Land for the cemetery was purchased in 1845, and Robert Carmichael was hired to do the landscaping. A man is sitting on the cliff adjacent to a walk which stops at a wooden gate and stone wall. While one of two very dramatic features of the original plan, the walk is now gone.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Residence, M.C. Russell, Maysville, Ky. (Two women, a young girl, and a young boy stand on the sidewalk in front of the house of M.C. Russell in Maysville, Kentucky. A small tree shields the house from the street. Tall cliffs are in the background above the house.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cumberland Hotel and Park, Somerset, Ky. On line of the Queen & Crescent Ry. (The Cumberland Hotel, a large three-story hotel, sits on a small rise along a street in Somerset, Kentucky. The front windows facing the street are decorated with awnings and a veranda appears to be on the left side of the hotel. A small natural rock wall, flanked by fences, sits between the hotel and the street.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Portsmouth (O.) and Scioto Valley from Kentucky. (Several people stand along a wooden fence in the foreground. Beyond the fence is a small stretch of cropland which is bordered by a river, possibly the Scioto River or the Ohio River. On the opposite banks of the river is a small town and hills can be seen in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky hills from Portsmouth, Ohio. (Street scene in early Portsmouth, Ohio. Several men stand in the dirt road near a grocery store. Several other buildings are nearby. Hills are in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cincinnati and Covington suspension bridge. (The John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge, which spans the Ohio River between Cincinnati, Ohio and Covington, Kentucky. Several large steamboats are docked in the distance. The bridge opened for use in 1866 and, at the time, was the longest suspension bridge in the world at 1057 feet. Today it is used for light automobile traffic and as a pedestrian bridge.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cincinnati Bridge] (The John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge. Four men stand on the Ohio River bank below the bridge. This bridge spans the Ohio River between Cincinnati, Ohio and Covington, Kentucky. It opened for use in 1866 and, at the time, was the longest suspension bridge in the world at 1057 feet. Today it is used for light automobile traffic and as a pedestrian bridge.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lincoln's Spring, Hodgenville, Ky. (Sinking Spring on Sinking Spring farm, the birthplace of Abraham Lincoln, in Hodgenville, Kentucky. One man sits in the grass in the foreground. Another man stands above the spring watching a third man who is stooped down over the spring water. The spring is in the rocky hillside and descends further into the ground where water runs in through a very small pipe. Abraham Lincoln National Park was established in 1916. It is now the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site run by the National Park Service.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lincoln Memorial contains the cabin, Ky. (The Lincoln Memorial at the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site in Hodgenville, Kentucky. The memorial houses the replica of the cabin where Abraham Lincoln was born.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Natural Bridge near Beaver Gap--from under cliff. (Natural arch near Beaver Gap in Kentucky. It is believed to be located in McCreary County, Kentucky near the Cumberland River between Parker's Lake and Flat Rock. Picturesque scenery on the Cincinnati Southern Railway.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Landing steamer passengers, Uniontown, Ky., flood of 1898. (Uniontown, Kentucky during the Ohio River flood of 1898. Floodwaters cover the town and its buildings. Several people in small boats are in the floodwaters.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Distant view of Cumberland Mountains from Middlesborough, Ky. On line of the Louisville & Nashville R.R. (The Cumberland Mountains viewed from the city of Middlesborough, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • U.S. Battleship "Kentucky" on the after deck. (Eight men in naval uniforms pose on deck of the USS Kentucky (BB-6), a battleship launched in 1898 by the Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company of Newport News, Virginia.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky team. (A man sits atop a large log on the back of a horse-drawn wagon. The wagon is being pulled through a valley and is surrounded by crops on the other side of a wooden fence.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Curious sand-stone rock, excavated near the cave about 15 years since, and now to be seen in the hotel yard. (A large sandstone rock sits in the yard of the Mammoth Cave Hotel in Mammoth Cave, Kentucky. The hotel, which sits within the boundaries of the Mammoth Cave National Park, was built by John Croghan in 1841 and destroyed by fire in 1916. The rock appears to have a unique design on one side giving it a woven appearance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mammoth Cave entrance. (Aboveground view of a narrow opening leading down into Mammoth Cave. A ladder extends up through the opening which is surrounded by rocky ground and bare trees. Mammoth Cave is the longest cave system in the world and located within Mammoth Cave National Park in Mammoth Cave, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Gothic Chapel. (Gothic Chapel in Mammoth Cave. This room within the cave system gives the illusion that it is supported by gigantic stalactites which extend from ceiling to floor. Mammoth Cave is the longest cave system in the world and located within Mammoth Cave National Park in Mammoth Cave, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Giant's Coffin. (Giant's Coffin in Mammoth Cave. This rock formation, resembling a large coffin, is forty feet long, twenty feet wide, and eight feet high. It is on the right of the Main Cave, one mile from the entrance. Mammoth Cave is the longest cave system in the world and located within Mammoth Cave National Park in Mammoth Cave, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Deserted Chamber. (A man, suitably dressed for caving in tall black boots, walks through Deserted Chamber, a geological feature in Mammoth Cave. The Deserted Chamber is a room 100 feet in length within the cave system. Mammoth Cave is the longest cave system in the world and located within Mammoth Cave National Park in Mammoth Cave, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Pillars in "Mammoth Dome." (Close-up view of pillars in the Mammoth Dome located in Mammoth Cave. Mammoth Cave is the longest cave system in the world and located within Mammoth Cave National Park in Mammoth Cave, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The Kentucky State Building, World's Fair, Chicago, U.S.A. (Several men and women stroll in front of the Kentucky State Building on the grounds of the World's Fair in Chicago in 1893.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Royal Oxford. (Short horn Durham.) (A large shorthorn bull stands in front of a large barn. The University of Louisville Photographic Archives houses another copy of this stereograph as Image Number ULPA 2000.89.07.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 9th Duchess. (Short horn Durham.) (Hand-tinted stereograph of an African American standing in front of a large barn holding the reins of a shorthorn cow.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lexington. (A man stands in front of a barn holding the reins of Lexington, a bay horse born in 1850.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Almont. (An African American man stands in front of a barn holding the reins of Almont, a bay horse born in 1864 standing fifteen and one-half hands high.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Charge bayonets! 1st Kentucky volunteers--Porto [sic] Rican Army. (Soldiers from the 1st Regiment of the Kentucky Volunteer Infantry at a Newport News, Virginia encampment, preparing to go to Puerto Rico in summer 1898. The soldiers are performing a drill while holding their rifles diagonally in front of their bodies with both hands. The soldiers remained in Puerto Rico as part of the island's occupation forces until the end of the Spanish American War.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Fire! 1st Kentucky volunteers--Porto [sic] Rican Army. (Soldiers from the 1st Regiment of the Kentucky Volunteer Infantry at a Newport News, Virginia encampment, preparing to go to Puerto Rico in summer 1898. Soldiers are lined up in double rows with rifles in firing position. The soldiers remained in Puerto Rico as part of the island's occupation forces until the end of the Spanish American War.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • U.S. engineering party measuring the discharge of the Ohio River at Paducah, Ky., April 1882. (Four men are on a boat in the Ohio River tied to another boat with a man standing on its bow leaning against an American flag. Three of the four men on the first boat are sitting beneath an umbrella, while the fourth man stands near the man on the second boat.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View on Red River near the dam. (Two females stand along the bank near a dam in the Red River in Kentucky on a sunny day.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Red River cut off, looking south. (A man with horse and buggy stands in a dry river bed of the Red River in Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Red River iron works dam. (A man sits on a dam at Red River Iron Works along the Red River near Clay City, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View on Red River. (Small portion of Red River framed by numerous trees.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Red River valley. (A man sits on a large rock in the foreground overlooking the Red River and its valley in Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Pilot Knob, from Smith's Mill. (View of Pilot Knob in Powell County, Kentucky with Smith's Mill and millstream in the foreground. A large farm with farmhouse and outbuildings sits between the mill and Pilot Knob.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View on Licking River, Ky. (A man in a tall hat sits fishing along the banks of the Licking River in Kentucky. A large broken and twisted dead tree frames the man.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The old mill, Elkhorn. (An old mill along Elkhorn Creek in Kentucky. Four buildings sit near the bank of the creek.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Elkhorn Bridge. The arch. (Three children sit on top of the arched stone Elkhorn Bridge at Elkhorn Creek in Kentucky. Behind the bridge two boys are sitting on a dead tree seemingly suspended horizontally across the archway. Some children are wading in the creek while others stand along the bank. The University of Louisville Photographic Archives houses another copy of this stereograph as Image Number ULPA 2000.89.04.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Petrified rock. Elk Lick River. (A man sits high above a large rock along the Elk Lick Creek near Lewisburg, Kentucky. The rock has a large hole in the center and is surrounded by dead trees.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hanging rock and cut, Emory River. (View of large rock known as "The Sphinx" along the Emory River in Tennessee. The rock is poised between the river and the railroad tracks. On the other side of the tracks is a large rock cliff with a cross visible at the top. Picturesque scenery on the Cincinnati Southern Railway.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Deer Leap. Rockcastle River. (Tall cliff with large trees surrounding its base, possibly in spring or fall. A smaller rock formation with logs upon it is in the foreground. While the cliff is near Rockcastle River, the river is not pictured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Devil's Candlestick, from above. (Rock formation in a heavily wooded area possibly near Rockcastle River. The river is not pictured.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The Whirlpool. Rockcastle River. (A whirlpool in the Rockcastle River surrounded by large boulders in the foreground and cliffs in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The Devil's Beanpot, Rockcastle River. (Interesting rock formation and its reflection in the Rockcastle River.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View from Bee Rock, Rockcastle River. (The Rockcastle River surrounded by forests with Bee Rock in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cut near tunnel, with party of engineers. (Three engineers survey near the railroad which runs between two cliffs in the vicinity of the Kentucky River.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View on Danville Pike. (View on Danville Pike in Kentucky, a wide dirt road bordered by a wooden fence on one side and cliffs on the other.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cut, near Cogar's. (Two men stand on a road in the "cut" between two cliffs near Cogar's Landing on the Kentucky River in Jessamine County, Kentucky. Thomas Cogar operated a ferry at the landing until 1871. The University of Louisville Photographic Archives houses another copy of this stereograph as Image Number ULPA 1979.05.01.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View on Hickman Creek. (A man sits on a stump at the end of a dirt road. A woman sits on a horse in a shallow part of Hickman Creek in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky River views. (A narrow shallow stream running through a forest viewed through dead tree limbs, possibly near the Kentucky River.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Chimney Rock, Kentucky River. (Hand-tinted image of Chimney Rock along the Kentucky River in Kentucky. Four people stand on top of the rock formation and one man stands leaning against its base. A ladder is in the foreground leaning against the adjoining cliff face. The University of Louisville Photographic Archives houses another copy of this stereograph as Image Number ULPA 2000.89.22.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cogar's ferry. (Aerial view of Cogar's ferry at Cogar's Landing on the Kentucky River near Brooklyn, Kentucky. Thomas Cogar operated a ferry here from 1845 to 1871.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Boone's Knob, Kentucky River. (Boone's Knob, a large hill along the Kentucky River. The river is in the foreground.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The Flower Vase. (Two men are in a wooded area, possibly near the Kentucky River. There is a tall cliff on the right side of the picture and a small rocky overhang on the left. One man stands among the trees and shrubs while the other crouches beneath the overhang.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Bridge with swing span] (Swing bridge with span open over a river. A person is standing on the stationary span in the foreground.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Locomotive on swing span of bridge.] (Locomotive traveling on swing span of a swing bridge directly towards the photographer. A plaque is on one side of the span and a small structure sits on the opposite side of the tracks. The opposite shore is in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Dam on stream] (Dam and shallow waterfall stretching the width of a small river, possibly in Kentucky. A few buildings can be seen on the wooded hill in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cave Glen. Central cascade. (Stream with cascading waterfalls surrounded by woods in Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mouth of Canip, Ky. (Six people stand near a large bare tree at the mouth of Canip Creek along the Ohio River in Trimble County, Kentucky. Two boats are on the river.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lover's Leap. 600 feet high. (Lover's Leap, a 600 foot cliff in Powell County, Kentucky. A fence and small structure sit at the base of the cliff in a wooded area. Duplicate image of ULPA 2000.89.23 but with different photographer and publisher information.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cave Glen. Central cascade. (Close-up view of a stream with cascading waterfalls in Kentucky. The University of Louisville Photographic Archives houses another copy of this stereograph as Image Number ULPA 2000.89.05.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [The Mirror] (Rockcastle River in Kentucky with Panther's Leap, a tall cliff surrounded by woods in the background. The cliff is reflected in the river.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Garfield Memorial, Cleveland, O. (Close-up of the Garfield Monument in Lakeview Cemetery in Cleveland, Ohio. The monument, dedicated two years after President James Garfield's death, is 180 feet tall and sits on a hill overlooking the cemetery.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • From Washington Monument (n.), White House, Treasury, and State Department, Washington, U.S.A. (Almost aerial view of Washington, D.C. showing the White House and other government buildings behind a green space bordered by trees. Title: (2) From Washington Monument (N.), White House, Treasury, and State Department, Washington, U.S.A. Copyright statement: Copyright 1908 by Underwood & Underwood. Text on left: Underwood & Underwood, Publishers. New York, London, Toronto-Canada, Ottawa-Kansas. Text on right: Works and Studios. Arlington, N.J. Westwood, N.J. Descriptive information on back of card: You are looking nearly north; the Potomac River is behind you. That is the south front of the White House among the trees, with 16th Street running north beyond it and Connecticut Avenue leading off diagonally toward the N.W. Many of the most distinguished residents live in that part of the city just beyond and to the left of the Presidential mansion. The famous East Room is on the main floor in that wing at the right of the outward-curving portico; the state dining room is on the this (south) side at the left of the portico. The huge oblong pile of granite at the left (west) of the White House furnishes official headquarters for the State, War and Navy Departments. The War Department occupies the west wing, the Navy Department the east wing. The Secretary of State is located in the south end of the main building. In the library of the State Department on the third floor are kept documents valuable beyond any money estimate-among others, the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States. The Treasury Department is located in that building of sandstone and granite with the Greek portico at the east of the White House. There is carried on the almost inconceivably vast and complicated financial business of the country. The mechanical work of printing Treasury and National bank notes is done at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, but here they are counted, recorded and sent away; here are kept in great vaults ton of gold and silver coin ready for the redemption of the government's promises to pay. See 'Washington through the Stereoscope,' with special, keyed maps locating all the standpoints taken and identifying all the landmarks. From Descriptive Bulletin No. 2, copyrighted, 1904, by Underwood & Underwood. In multiple languages: From Washington Monument north; Washington, U.S.A.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Railroad bridge at Ohio River] (View from waterfront of railroad bridge or trestle crossing the Ohio River. The bridge is the Panhandle Bridge, built around 1870, and operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad. The bridge linked Clarksville, Indiana, to Louisville, Kentucky, spanning the Ohio River and Portland Canal. The current bridge in this location is the Fourteenth Street Bridge. Image is similar to 1984.14.19.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Indiana side of Pennsylvania RR bridge. Under construction? C. 1870-71. (View from waterfront of railroad bridge or trestle crossing the Ohio River. The bridge is the Panhandle Bridge, built around 1870, and operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad. The bridge linked Clarksville, Indiana, to Louisville, Kentucky, spanning the Ohio River and Portland Canal. The current bridge in this location is the Fourteenth Street Bridge. Image is similar to 1984.14.18.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Bridge at Ohio River] (Distant view of a bridge, possibly the Panhandle Bridge, crossing the Ohio River with trees in shadows in the foreground.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Possibly Indiana side, Wave Rock. (View from Ohio River and small island below and the opposite shore in the distance. A tree is on the bluff to the left.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Group of men at Ohio River] (Four men on the rocky shoreline of the Ohio River with a bridge to the right. The bridge is most likely the Panhandle Bridge or Pennsylvania Railroad Bridge linking Louisville, Kentucky, to Clarksville, Indiana. Two men stand, while the other two sit on logs.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [New Albany, Indiana] (View of New Albany, Indiana, on the Ohio River as viewed from Louisville, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Louisville Water Company pumping station] (Louisville Water Company Pumping Station at Zorn Avenue and River Road. Classical building with columns and a tower in front. Smokestacks are on either side of the building. Designed by architect Theodore R. Scowden, the station opened in 1860 but suffered damage in the 1890 tornado. It was added to the National Register in 1971.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Louisville Water Company pumping station] (Louisville Water Company Pumping Station at Zorn Avenue and River Road. Classical building with columns and a tower in front as viewed slightly off center towards the right. Smokestacks are on either side of the building. Designed by architect Theodore R. Scowden, the station opened in 1860 but suffered damage in the 1890 tornado. It was added to the National Register in 1971.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Louisville Water Company reservoir ] (Brick sidewalk lining a wrought-iron fence surrounding a water reservoir. The reservoir was part of the Louisville Water Company pumping station located at River Road and Zorn Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Men at Louisville Water Company reservoir] (Two men stand on the inside of a wrought-iron fence surrounding a water reservoir with a brick sidewalk circling the fence. The men wear hats and suits and face each other. The reservoir was part of the Louisville Water Company pumping station located at River Road and Zorn Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Louisville Water Company pumping station and reservoir] (View of fields with grass and trees below with the Louisville Water Company Pumping Station in the distance. In the foreground is a white fence with just one rail across the top of the posts.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Louisville Water Company reservoir] (Side view of a bench behind a white fence with a single rail. Behind the bench is a brick walkway and then a wrought-iron fence surrounding a water reservoir. The reservoir was part of the Louisville Water Company pumping station located at River Road and Zorn Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Louisville Water Company pumping station and Ohio River] (Fields of grass and trees with the Louisville Water Company Pumping Station in the distance and the Ohio River behind it.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Louisville Water Company reservoir] (Segment of a white fence with a single rail at the top of a hill and fields of grass and trees below it near the Louisville Water Company reservoir. At the base of the hill is a brick walkway. The reservoir was part of the Louisville Water Company pumping station located at River Road and Zorn Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Men at Louisville Water Company reservoir] (Three men at a bench in front of a white fence with a single rail at the top of a hill near the Louisville Water Company reservoir. Two men sit on the bench, and the third man stands behind them. They overlook fields of grass and trees with a building behind them to the right. The reservoir was part of the Louisville Water Company pumping station located at River Road and Zorn Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Young man] (Portrait of a young man looking slightly to the right. His hair is slightly long behind the ears and has a slight wave. He wears a jacket and short necktie.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Family in front of house] (Family in front of the doorway of a house. A woman and man sit on chairs with three young men or boys behind them. The men on either side stand, while the one in the middle appears to be sitting. The woman wears a long dress and the men are in ties and jackets. The man in front has a hat on his knee. Part of a house is in the background with a broom leaning against the wall.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Group of men by a tree] (Group of men in front of a tall tree with more growth on either side. Three men sit on the ground with three more standing behind them. Their clothes include neckties, suspenders, and hats.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Group of boys on a hill] (Group of boys sitting on the side of a hill. Two informal rows of boys wearing hats and no shoes on a hillside.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Group of men near waterfall] (Four men on the rocky ground next to a waterfall. Three men sit while the fourth one props himself up next to the water.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Group of men on a hill] (Five men pose on a hillside with a tree, wagon, and corner of a building in the background to the left. Two men sit on a log while the other three stand behind them with a foot resting on the log.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Market Street Bridge over Silver Creek. (Market Street Bridge, a covered bridge crossing Silver Creek in New Albany, Indiana. The bridge is supported by brick posts. Trees are on either side of the creek.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Three-story house] (Three-story brick house with shutters at the windows. The house is close to the street and has a wrought-iron fence between it and the sidewalk.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Group of men overlooking the Ohio River] (Distant view of four men on a large tree stump at the base of a hill with a Ohio River and its opposite shore in the background. The men sit or stand on the stump.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Silver Creek. (Flat waterfront of dirt and branches with Silver Creek and its opposite shore in the background. There is a small island about halfway between the two shores.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tarascon Mill on Shippingport Island. (Seven men in a canoe on a body of water with trees on the shore to the left. Three of the men stand in the boat with the other four sitting, one of whom holds the oars.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Group of men overlooking the Ohio River] (Four men on a grassy bluff overlooking the Ohio River. The men in the center sit with the other two standing on the ends. A house and other buildings are in the distance towards the right.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View of Ohio River from hill] (View of the Ohio River from a grassy bluff with a few trees at the edge of the bluff and more in the background on the opposite shores.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View of Ohio River from hill] (View of the Ohio River from a grassy bluff with a few trees at the edge of the bluff and more in the background on the opposite shores.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Group of men overlooking the Ohio River] (Four men stand in shadow at the edge of a bluff with the Ohio River and a narrow island below them. A tree is to the left on the bluff.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Shoreline and Ohio River] (Rocky shore leading to the Ohio River with the opposite tree-lined shore in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Ohio River] (Ohio River with trees and the shore in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Two men at Ohio River] (Two men sit on a rocky shore with trees and a corner of the Ohio River visible to the left. One person sits in front of the other with a few feet in between them.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Shoreline and Ohio River] (Flat shoreline with the Ohio River to the right and trees in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Ohio River] (Ohio River with trees in the distance and a small stretch of shoreline in front.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Man overlooking Ohio River] (Man in hat, suspenders, and tie sits on a log at the shoreline of the Ohio River with a small island and opposite shore in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View of Ohio River from hill] (View looking down towards rocky shoreline and the Ohio River with the opposite shore in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View of Ohio River from hill] (View from bluff of shoreline and river with a small island and opposite shoreline in the distance. A tree is at the edge of the bluff on the right.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View over falls toward Shippingport. 18th Street Bridge to Shippingport is in view left of center. (Rocky shoreline leading to river and then the opposite shoreline in the distance. Falls of the Ohio near Shippingport Island.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Probably looking upstream from Shippingport Island. Pennsylvania Bridge in distance and some spires of downtown Louisville. Or Rock Island. (View from shoreline of the river with a bridge in the distance. Looking upstream from Shippingport Island with the Pennsylvania Bridge or Panhandle Bridge in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Shoreline and Ohio River] (Grass-covered shore leading to the Ohio River and opposite shore in the distance. A small pier juts out into the river. The outline of buildings can be seen in the background.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Portland in background from mouth of Silver Creek. (Narrow canal formed between two dirt-covered slightly hilly pieces of land with the river on either side.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • DePauw glass works at bend in river. (Aerial view of town showing buildings, trees, and the river in the distance in the far right. DePauw's American Plate Glass Works is identified at the river bend. Similar view to 1989.14.44.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [DePauw glassworks?] (Aerial view of town showing buildings, trees, and the river in the distance in the far right. DePauw's American Plate Glass Works is identified at the river bend. Similar view to 1989.14.43.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [New Albany, Indiana] (New Albany, Indiana, on the Ohio River. Aerial view of a town along the shoreline of the river with opposite shore in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [New Albany, Indiana] (New Albany, Indiana, on the Ohio River. Aerial view of a town along the shoreline of the river with opposite shore in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [View of Ohio River from hill] (Tree-covered land leading down to Ohio River with the opposite shoreline in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Fields and Ohio River] (Grassy area with a fence running through with trees and buildings below leading to the river and the opposite shoreline in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [House and fields] (Large white house in the distance surrounded by hilly land with grass and trees.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [New Albany, Indiana] (New Albany, Indiana. View of town below from a tree-filled hill or bluff.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [New Albany, Indiana] (New Albany, Indiana. View of town below from a grassy hill or bluff with a portion of the river visible to the right.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [New Albany, Indiana] (New Albany, Indiana. View of town below from a tree-filled hill or bluff with a portion of the river visible to the right.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [New Albany, Indiana] (New Albany, Indiana. View of town below from a grassy hill with the river and opposite shore in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [New Albany, Indiana] (New Albany, Indiana. Aerial view of town with the river and opposite shore in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [New Albany, Indiana] (New Albany, Indiana. View of river and opposite shoreline from a tree-filled hill or bluff.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Man overlooking fields and Ohio River] (A man in a jacket and hat stands at the top of a hill looking down on fields with a few buildings scatter about and a portion of the Ohio River visible to the left.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Man overlooking fields and Ohio River] (A man wearing suspenders and a hat stands at the top of a hill looking down on fields with a few clusters of buildings and a portion of the Ohio River visible in the distance.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [New Albany, Indiana] (New Albany, Indiana. Aerial view of town with the river visible to the right.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Man overlooking Ohio River] (A man in a jacket and hat stands at the Ohio River's shoreline with the opposite shore in the distance. The man is only visible from the waist up.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Louisville water works. (Louisville Water Company Pumping Station at Zorn Avenue and River Road. Classical building with columns and a tower in front. Smokestacks are on either side of the building. Designed by architect Theodore R. Scowden, the station opened in 1860 but suffered damage in the 1890 tornado. It was added to the National Register in 1971. On back of card: Stereographic Views by Jos. Krementz. Cor. 4th & Jefferson. Louisville, Ky. Handwritten: Louisville Water Works.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Most striking of sky-scrapers - the 'Flatiron' Bldg., (20 stories) Broadway, New York, U.S.A. (View of Flatiron Building in New York from down the street. Twenty-story wedge-shaped building at the intersection of two streets. Pedestrians and horses and wagons are on the street. Title: 10 Most striking of Sky-scrapers - the 'Flatiron' Bldg., (20 Stories) Broadway, New York, U.S.A. Copyright statement: Copyright 1903 by H.C. White Co. Text on left: H.C. White Co., Chicago, New York, London. Gen'l Office and Works, North [ ]. Text on right: The Perfect Stereograph. (Trade Mark.) [ ] April 14, 1903. Other Patents Pending. Descriptive information on back of card: [in multiple languages] The 'Flatiron' Building (20 stories), New York, U.S.A. Madison Square is surrounded by buildings in every style, ranging from the old dwellings on its north side to this most sensational of skyscrapers on the south. A triangular plot, 87 by 190 feet, entirely surrounded by streets, was formerly occupied by low buildings, tapering to a flimsy apex towards the Square. The march of improvements had passed by this spot at the meeting-place of Broadway with Fifth Avenue. The whole character of the square was changed with the erection of the Madison Square Garden at the northeast angle, and one huge marble office-building on the east, scornfully looking down upon its neighbor, a church with a now ridiculous spire. A new court building of great beauty also found its way into the east side of the Square. And still the triangular spot, in spite of its great value, remained conspicuously unimproved. At least a way was found to meet the difficulties of the site, and this monstrous building has arisen to claim a short-lived reputation as the architectural sensation of the day. Like the other skyscrapers it has a great framework of steel from top to bottom, and the apparently solid masonry, rising like a precipice of rock, has about as little to do with sustaining the weight of the building as the plastering on the wall with the support of the ceiling. In many such buildings it has actually become the practice to add the facing of stone and brick to the stories in any order that happens to be convenient, beginning at any particular height and working downwards. The 'Flatiron' was built in this manner, and with but one object - that of utilizing every square foot of ground to the best advantage. It does not compete with those buildings in which architectural form has been allowed to rule, even where great height and the largest utility were necessary conditions. In contrast is the six-story Fifth Avenue Hotel to the right, with its broad windows and general air of respectability - the best-known building in the Square, though a but a small portion is visible from our present point of view. The vista of Broadway ends with the trees of Union Square. See Century Magazine, vol. 64, p. 512. New International Encyclopedia, 'Fireproof Construction.' Scribner's Magazine, vol. 22, p.37.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tribute to McKinley's memory - Secretary Hay's eulogy before Congress, Washington, U.S.A. (United States Capitol chamber filled with people during a eulogy for President William McKinley. The desks on the floor, the mounted desk, and the galleries above are full. Title: (6)-8961-A tribute to McKinley's memory-Secretary Hay's eulogy before Congress, Washington, U.S.A. Copyright statement: Copyright 1902 by Underwood & Underwood. Text on left: Underwood & Underwood, Publishers. New York, London, Toronto-Canada, Ottawa-Kansas. Text on right: Works and Studios. Arlington, N.J. Westwood, N.J. Washington, D.C. Descriptive information on back of card: You are looking from the western gallery of the House of Representatives during Secretary Hay's famous Eulogy on President McKinley, February 27, 1902 (as it happened, the twentieth anniversary of Blaine's Eulogy on President Garfield when McKinley was chairman of the committee of arrangements). The two houses are in joint session, with the Cabinet, the Justices of the Supreme Court, the Diplomatic Corps, representatives of the Army and Navy, and distinguished guests, including Prince Henry of Prussia. Secretary Hay you see addressing the assembly. President Roosevelt sits in the front row of seats directly facing the speaker, in a high-backed chair next that centre-aisle. Prince Henry it at his right hand in the other high-backed chair this side of the Chief Magistrate. Just across the aisle from the President, in the front row of seats, is Chief Justice Fuller; and beyond him in regular order are Associate Justices Harlan, Brewer, Brown, Shiras, White, Peck ham, and McKenna. Lord Pauncefote, the British ambassador (since deceased) sits in the chair directly behind that of Chief Justice Fuller. The gentlemen in that row behind him are all members of the diplomatic corps. Minister Wu, the Chinese ambassador, is easily distinguishable (the seventh man beyond Lord Pauncefote) as he leans forward in his seat. Opposite you, General Miles, conspicuous with his military sash, is just beyond Secretary Hay. The front seats on this side of the semicircular curve are occupied chiefly by members of the Cabinet. The second man this side of Prince Henry is Attorney-General Knox. The sixth man this side of Prince Henry (directly in front of you, between you and the speaker), is the new Cabinet member, Secretary Cortelyou of the Department of Commerce and Labor. The nearer one of the two men sitting behind Secretary Hay, next the south wall, is Henderson of Iowa, the Speaker of the House, the President of the Senate, Frye of Maine, sits just beyond him. In multiple languages: A Touching Tribute to McKinley's Memory-Secretary Hay's Eulogy. Washington, D.C.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Broadway, New York, N.Y., U.S.A. (Crowded view of Broadway Avenue in New York City. The narrow street, which is lined with buildings, is filled with streetcars, pedestrians, wagons, and horses and carriages. Title: 2419- Broadway, New York, N.Y., U.S.A. Text on left: Keystone View Company. Manufacturers and Publishers. Text on left: Meadville, Pa. St. Louis, Mo. Copyright, 1897, by B.L. Singley. Descriptive information on back of card: (6) This is, undoubtedly the greatest commercial thoroughfare in America; it extends from Bowling Green to Central Park, a distance of five miles, beyond which it is called the boulevard.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • As in pioneer days, mountaineer's cabin, Cumberland Gap, Tenn. (Four people in front of a log cabin with shingled roof and stone chimney. An elderly man sits in a chair with two children standing on either side of him and two children sitting at his feet. A large cluster of trees is visible behind the cabin. Title: 13726- As in Pioneer Days, Mountaineer's Cabin, Cumberland Gap, Tenn. Text on left: Keystone View Company. Copyrighted. Manufacturers Publishers. Made in U.S.A. Text on right: Meadville, Pa., New York, N.Y. Portland, Oregon, London, Eng., Sydney, Aus. Text on top center: 168. Descriptive information on back of card: P 168 (13726) Mountaineers' Cabin, Cumberland Gap, Tenn. This is the home of some people who live in the mountains of Tennessee. Perhaps it is not like your house. You can see it is a log cabin. It is more like the houses that were built long ago before there were great cities and many people in our country. It probably has just one room. This room has an open fireplace, and much of the cooking is done there. Some is done in the iron kettle you see out of doors. Did you ever count the windows in your house? Most likely this house has just one window. DO you think these people do not have enough air because there is only one window? They have plenty of air. The cracks between the logs are not all filled in. The wind blows through these cracks. There is no cellar under the house. The floor probably has great cracks in it. The wind blows through these, too. Oh, yes, there is enough air. You would think so in winter when it is so cold the ground is covered with snow. You can see that the people who live in such a house must be poor. These children have very few toys except rag dolls and broken pieces of dishes. But almost every one has a dog for a playmate and sometimes a pet pig. Food is so scarce in winter that they often go hungry. Copyright by The Keystone View Company.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Palace of electricity and lagoon from Lewis and Clark bridge, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A. (Stone bridge across a narrow body of water with a long building with multiple columns to the left and another building with columns in the background. Title: 15012-Palace of Electricity and Lagoon from Lewis and Clark Bridge, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A. Text on left: Keystone View Company, Manufacturers & Publishers, Copyright 1904 by B.L. Singley. Text on right: Meadville, Pa., St. Louis, Mo., San Francisco, Cal., Toronto, Can., New York, N.Y., London, England. Descriptive information included on back of stereograph: The Palace of Electricity on the west of the Grand Basin (See 15011) is 650 feet long and 525 feet wide. It is entirely surrounded by the west lagoon (See 15010). In architecture it corresponds to the Palace of Education, seen in the background, which is on the opposite side of the Basin. Its features are the Corinthian Colonnade, behind which is a low balcony and the court pavilions at the corners, above which rise pyramidal towers each surmounted by the figure of a woman holding a star in her uplifted hand. Lewis and Clark Bridge from which the view is taken, is at the foot of the walk leading up from the Palace of Electricity to Festival Hall (See 15000), and is interesting not alone in that it is an artistic tribute to the great northwestern discoverers of a century ago, but for the further reason that their crowning achievement is being appropriately celebrated next year at Portland, Oregon, by an exposition worthy of the event. Copyright 1904 by Keystone View Company.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Manhattan Island, N.Y. as seen from an airplane. (Aerial view of Manhattan. Rows of buildings and streets with parkland in the center. P-26295 Manhattan Island, N.Y. as Seen from an Airplane. Text on left: Keystone View Company. Copyrighted. Manufacturers Publishers. Made in U.S.A. Text on right: Meadville, Pa., New York, N.Y., Chicago, Ill., London, England. Text on top center: P27. Descriptive information on back of card: P27-(26295) Manhattan Island, N.Y., As Seen From An Airplane. Manhattan Island is so large that it does not look like an island at all. But it has water all around it. This picture looks like a map, doesn't it? It was taken from an airplane. You can see the real houses and streets and the river. On a map you would see dots or squares for the houses and lines for the streets and the river. On a map which shows hundreds of cities you would see only one dot for a whole city. The houses and streets would not show at all. This picture shows how part of New York City looks from an airplane. Does it look like that to a bird? We could call it a bird's-eye view, then, couldn't we? Notice how straight the streets are. Broadway is about the only crooked one. Can you find it? Central Park is the place where you see the trees and the water. Can you see the big white building on the right hand side of the park? That is the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Teachers of New York City take their children there to show them beautiful pictures and the wonderful things that people of other countries and of other times have made and used. Copyright by The Keystone View Company.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Woodburne. Cattle barn. Residence in distance. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Hemp field.] (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Breaking hemp. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Hemp field.] (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Walnut Hill, Harness stock farm. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • "Castleton" Keene. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lyndhurst Stone. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Government building. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Orphanage. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cumberland Gap from Tennessee. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hemp cutting and spreading. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cumberland Gap from Kentucky side. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Brood mares and colts, Woodburne. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Transylvania University buildings, from an engraving. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Woodburne, Alexander, Gateway and Lodge. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Horse mill. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Hemp worker.] (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Residence of late D.D. Bell. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • "Gritting" corn. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Saw mill and turning lathe, Clover Fork. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hand mill. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Corn grinding, Lick Branch. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Log Rock, Pine Mountain. Length: 80'. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Whip-sawing lumber. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Funeral procession, Harlan County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • South Down Sheep, Woodburne. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Wedding party. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Rock House store and post office. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Interior of cabin. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cabin on Blacktop. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Rock House, near Pikeville, Honey Comb Rock. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bath County iron ore, 15-feet thick. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bath County iron mines tipple. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bath County iron mines. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Spinning flax. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Spinning wool. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky Gap, Big Caney Creek. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Baptist Church, Winchester. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Presbyterian church at Winchester. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cliff Owens Dairy Farm. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Water works power house, Winchester. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Winchester Railway, Light & Ice plant. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Dam at lake, Winchester water works. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Court house, Winchester. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • J.M. Pickerell residence. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hemp field, Nelson farm. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lake on Nelson farm. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Beau Brothers carriage shop. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cliff Owens Dairy Farm. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Logging, Breathitt County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • McCord & Adams Carriage Company. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • C.B. Ecton farm. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • C.B. Ecton farm. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Logging scene in Breathitt County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Near Breathitt County, logging camp. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Sawmill in Breathitt County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Providence Baptist Church. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Railroad used by logging plant. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View of Rockcastle County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Sawmill, Breathitt County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mining tipple. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Working public roads. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tobacco field. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Deer park owned by I.H. Wheatcroft. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tobacco fields in Christian County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Empire Coal Company neat Hopkinsville. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Empire Coal Company, near Hopkinsville. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cerulean Springs. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Banker's Association, Hopkinsville. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Deer park of I.H. Wheatcroft. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tipple of Nortonville Coal Company. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cerulean Springs. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • St. Bernard Coal Company, Martin's Gap. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • St. Bernard Coal Co., Martins Gap, Christian County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • St. Bernard Coal Company, Martin's Gap. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • St. Bernard Coal Co., Martin's Gap, Christian County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • St. Bernard Coal Company, Martin's Gap. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • St. Bernard Coal Company, Martin's Gap. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cerulean Springs. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Prince Wilkes, drawing of horse. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mercer County stone dwelling built in 1790. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Harrodsburg Springs, Ky. from an engraving. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Burial place of Col. Gabriel Slaughter. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Shawnee Spring. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cerulean Spring. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Payne's Spring, camp ground of Captain Harrod. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cerulean Springs. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • High Bridge, Kentucky River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Spot where old fort stood at Harrodsburg. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • High Bridge on Kentucky River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • High Bridge on Kentucky River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tree under which first sermon was preached. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Boone's Cave, where Daniel Boone spent two winters. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The Ray Burying ground. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • McAfee Spring. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Grave of first white child buried in Kentucky. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tomb of Ann McGinty. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Gore's Spring. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mud Meeting House, oldest church in Kentucky. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Fine old Mercer County residence. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Distillery in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Fountainbleau Spring. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Distillery in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • A Mercer County product. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hunting doves in Mercer hemp field. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cutting hemp in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Shocking hemp in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • First cornfield in Kentucky. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mercer County toll gate. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Old water mill in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene on Dix River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Historic old house in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • King's Mill on Dix River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View of Harrodsburg Pike. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Famous fishing dam in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hunting doves in Mercer County hemp field. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • "The Grove," Mercer County view. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene at mouth of Dix River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • A Mercer County home. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • J.T.S. Brown and Sons Distillery. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Shooting doves in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • J.T.S. Brown and Sons Distillery. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • J.T.S. Brown and Sons Distillery. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mercer County "Horseless Carriage." (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • J.T.S. Brown and Sons Distillery. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Old home in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Historic cave in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The Ray tree. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • "Gambonite" from a drawing. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Breaking hemp. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The old Vivion House. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Fisherman's paradise, Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View on Salt River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Old Providence Burying Ground. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Beaumont College graduates. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Historic scene in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mercer County sheep. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • One of Mercer County's handsome tandems. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • One of Mercer County's fine horses. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Beaumont College, Harrodsburg. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Old log house in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • One of Mercer County's fine horses. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • One of Mercer County's fine horses. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • One of Mercer County's fine horses. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View of Shakertown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Old Thompson House, Shakertown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Team of oxen in Shakertown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • The old Shaker Mill. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Lock on the Kentucky River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene in Shakertown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Shakertown residence. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene in Shakertown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Home in Shakertown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • High Bridge on Kentucky River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Old Court House, Harrodsburg. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Daniel Boone, photo from old picture. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene in Dix River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Col. D.L. Moore's residence, Harrodsburg. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Scene in Mercer County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Family group on logs.] (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Mine entrance.] (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Mine tipple.] (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Grave of Granville Allen.] (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mack Penrod, one of Butler County's oldest settlers. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Steamer Park City at landing, Morgantown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tom Lee's country coal mine vein. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Morgantown "Belles" returning from a picnic. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ferry house at Morgantown on Green River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Typical negro cabin near Morgantown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Reception room, George H. Dabbs studio. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Operating room, George H. Dabbs studio. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • George H. Dabbs, self portrait. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • "A bunch of Morgantown roses." (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Oak tree, 6' 8" in diameter. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Allie Monroe Mauzy and his pets. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • First tipple erected by West Aberdeen Coal Company. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Raft log yard on Green River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Green's Mine near Morgantown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Boat landing at Morgantown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Miner's house of Aberdeen Coal Company. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Office of Aberdeen Coal Company. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Coal opening on Lum Drake farm. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Steamer "Allie" on Green River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Loading tipple on W. Aberdeen Coal Company. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Left-hand entry to Aberdeen Coal Company's mine. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bird's eye view of portion of London, Kentucky. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Old building once used as a church and school combined. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Baptist Seminary, London, built by public spirited citizen. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Sue Bennett Memorial School. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Model cottages on Sue Bennett campus. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • London Wagon Works. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Catching Building, containing London Post Office. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • London Manufacturing Company. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Cliffs near Dawson Springs on property of J.M. Willingham. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Dawson Springs Summit House. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View of Cumberland Gap. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • "Block Haulers" showing teams and outfits. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Stove factory on Mud Camp Creek. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Vocal and instrumental class leaders. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Saw mill owned by I.D. Bowman. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Stave factory near Good Luck, Kentucky. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Saltpetre cave on headwaters of Meshack Creek. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Acorns from a monster white oak near Persimmon. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Court house, Tompkinsville. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Apple tree near Tompkinsville, over a century old. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Artesian mineral water well. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Sprout from stump planted 100 years ago. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Frame of Barrett's Tobacco Stemmery, Wickliffe. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ferry boat that touches on three states in less than one. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Wickliffe Graded School. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View of Mammoth Cave Hotel. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Pit of fine white sand. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Shooting oil well. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Boring for oil, Wickliffe. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • "Piney Falls." (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View of strawberry pickers. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Strawberry patch. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • "Ice-berg" view in Pen Hollow. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Oil well in Grayson County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ice-berg, Pen Hollow, Hart County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Entrance to Mammoth Cave.Edmondson (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Oil wells in Hart County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • New Court House, Glasgow. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • "Working the road" near Eighty Eight, Kentucky. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Governor Beckham and staff at Mammoth Cave. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky negro cabin, Glasgow. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • An old Kentucky home, Glasgow. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hauling logs to the mill, Barren County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Old Maupin Hotel during Civil War, now burned. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky broom factory in Carlisle County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bethel Baptist, Fairview, near birthplace of Jefferson Davis. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Paducah Brewery. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mantel Rock, Livingston County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Wharf at Paducah. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • View on Braodway, Paducah. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Boat in Paducah Drydock for repair. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Exterior view, Carnegie Library, Paducah. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Boat in Paducah Drydock for repair. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Interior of Carnegie Library, Paducah. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Herefords on G.N. McGrew's Farm. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Mantel Rock from beneath. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Alden Knitting Mills, Paducah. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Fine Hereford bull on by G.N. McGrew. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Corn shredder. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Paducah Drydock Company. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Residence of Mr. Ed. Adkins near Paducah. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ed Atkins residence near Paducah. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Paducah wharf. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Plant of Sea Coast Mineral Company. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Residence of Postmaster E.M. Fisher. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Green River furnace. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hall in Mr. Ed. Atkins Home. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Green River Furnace. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Barrett's Tobacco Stemmery. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Residence of Ed. Adkins. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky Distilling Company, Distillery #1. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky Distilling Company office. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • City Hall in Uniontown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Coal tipple. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Railroad siding and car. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky Distilling Company Distillery #2. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • G.J. Harris Grain Elevator, Uniontown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • National Coal & Oil Company Mine #2. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Bonded Warehouse, Kentucky Distilling Co. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Soaper's Tobacco Stemmery. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Hotel Zora, Uniontown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Uniontown Roller Flour Mill. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Illinois Central Railroad Depot, Uniontown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Historic Hill Ford, Highland Creek. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Historic Hill Ford, Highland Creek. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Christian Church, Uniontown. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • St. Agnes Catholic Church. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • St. John's Episcopal Church. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Uniontown Cemetery. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Ohio River blocked by ice. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Tobacco patch. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • W.C. Wilson, photographer for Union County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • "Old Kentucky Burgoo" party. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • 700 lb. catch by W. Van Bussum. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Uniontown Steam Ferry. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • W.L. Anderson Logging outfit. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Dunbar Steamer at Burkesville. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Alexander Cottage, Burkesville. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Marrowbone Valley. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Burning flowing oil well at Cloyd's Landing. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Baptist Church and Liberty Female College. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Oil wells on island in Cumberland River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Burning flowing oil well at Cloyd's Landing. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Flowing oil well on Island in Cumberland River. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Sawmill, Randolph, Barren County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Poplar tree 11 feet in diameter, 31' circumference. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Saw Mill near Glasgow. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Glasgow Catholic Church built of rough stone gathered. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Oil city near glasgow. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Old McMurray House, use by both sides in Civil War. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Gaines Coal Company mines. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Traveler's Hotel, Fordsville. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Gaines Coal Company mines. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Swann-Day Lumber Co. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky Exhibit, Louisiana Purchase Exhibition. St. Louis. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky exhibit, Louisiana Purchase Exposition. St. Louis. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky Exhibit, Louisiana Purchase Exhibition. St. Louis. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Kentucky exhibit, Louisiana Purchase Exhibition. St. Louis. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • New Newtonia Hotel, Somerset, Kentucky. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • Burnside Graded School, Pulaski County. (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Brooklyn Bridge, Kentucky River, Kentucky, 1936] (Brooklyn Bridge in Boone Tunnel on Kentucky River at Mercer County and Jessamine County, Kentucky. The bridge has high, wide stone pillars and ends at the tunnel into the high rock bank amid trees growing there. Caption on back of image: "Brooklyn Bridge, Boone Tunnel Ky. River U.S. 68.") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Parachute, Bowman Field, Louisville, Kentucky, 1935] (Five men shown trying to secure a white parachute on the grass at Bowman Field in front of a biplane and buildings, Louisville, Kentucky. The airfield, established in 1919 by Abram H. Bowman, is still in operation, although Standiford Field (now Louisville International Airport) took over commercial airline services. The National Register of Historic Places created the Bowman Field Historic District (consisting of the Administration Building and two original hangars) in 1988.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Municipal Bridge, Louisville, Kentucky, 1931] (Municipal Bridge, a left side view from the Louisville, Kentucky, shore. Now known as the George Rogers Clark Memorial Bridge or the Second Street Bridge, it spans the Ohio River between Louisville, Kentucky, and Jeffersonville, Indiana. The bridge was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Municipal Bridge, Louisville, Kentucky, 1931] (Side view of part of the Municipal Bridge near the Louisville, Kentucky, shore. A boat and a bridge crane on the Ohio River and shore are visible under the bridge. Now known as the George Rogers Clark Memorial Bridge or the Second Street Bridge, it spans the Ohio River between Louisville, Kentucky, and Jeffersonville, Indiana. The bridge was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Bridge at River Road, Louisville, Kentucky] (Cut-off bridge at River Road in Louisville, Kentucky; a car is visible traveling across the bridge. Bennett's bar with "Curb Service" is on the right.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Louisville-Anchorage Bridge, Louisville, Kentucky, 1936] (Louisville-Anchorage Bridge, once used by Louisville Interurban Railroad Company, Louisville, Kentucky. The bridge spans a road and railroad tracks, which were for the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company. A water reservoir is shown on the left. Louisville Interurban Railroad opened its first route in 1904 from Louisville to Jeffersontown. By 1935, the company had closed all its routes.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Goose Creek Bridge, Louisville, Kentucky, 1935] (Goose Creek Bridge on River Road in Louisville, Kentucky. Two men flank the bridge at the fences, and two cars approach.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cortland Apartments, Louisville, Kentucky] (Four-story Cortland Apartment buildings on Fourth Street (then a cobblestone street) in Louisville, Kentucky. In front there is a mailbox, and across the street, a fire hydrant.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cortland Apartments, Louisville, Kentucky] (Angled view of four-story Cortland Apartment buildings on Fourth Street (then a cobblestone street) in Louisville, Kentucky, with a car parked in front.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cortland Apartments, Louisville, Kentucky] (Panoramic photograph of the four-story Cortland Apartment buildings on Fourth Street (then a cobblestone street) in Louisville, Kentucky.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Cortland Apartments, Louisville, Kentucky] (Four-story Cortland Apartments and courtyard on Fourth Street (then a cobblestone street) in Louisville, Kentucky. Photograph is on cardboard backing.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Douglass Apartments, Louisville, Kentucky, 1926] (Douglass Apartments at 2025 Douglass Boulevard, Louisville, Kentucky. Apartments shown on a rainy day with bare trees in front. Stamp on back of image: "If this photograph is reproduced, please credit Allen & Burckle. This print made by us in 1926. Allen & Burckle. Louisville.") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Captain Russ in flight, Louisville, Kentucky, 1935] (Captain Russ executes a loop in an airplane above Louisville, Kentucky. The airplane is based at Bowman Field. The airfield, established in 1919 by Abram H. Bowman, is still in operation, although Standiford Field (now Louisville International Airport) took over commercial airline services. The Administration Building, along with two original hangars, was registered with the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Puritan Apartments, Louisville, Kentucky, 1931] (Puritan Apartments, at Fourth Street and Ormsby Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky, with telephone lines in front.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Weissinger-Gaulbert Apartments, Louisville, Kentucky, 1920s] (Nine-story Weissinger-Gaulbert Apartment building, at Third and Broadway in Louisville, Kentucky. Brick building with decorative stone elements.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Willow Terrace Apartments, Louisville, Kentucky, 1923] (Willow Terrace, luxury apartment building designed by Joseph & Joseph architects and located at Cherokee Road and Baringer Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky. Brick building with two wings plus center. On back of image: "$1,000,000 by Joseph & Joseph. $110 + $250") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Willow Terrace Apartments, Louisville, Kentucky, 1931] (Willow Terrace, luxury apartment building designed by Joseph & Joseph architects and located at Cherokee Road and Baringer Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky. Brick building with two wings plus center. On bottom of photograph: "Mrs. Heimerdinger [name crossed out] Willow Trace Apts.") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [National Bank of Kentucky, Buechel, Kentucky, 1923] (Buechel branch of National Bank of Kentucky, 1923. There are four circular ornaments on the brick and stone edifice.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Louisville National Bank & Trust Company, Highlands branch, Louisville, Kentucky] (The Highlands branch of Louisville National Bank & Trust Company, located at Bardstown Road and Baxter Avenue (now a Chase Bank). Two large black circles appear on the photograph, with one reading "2 Reverse this picture.") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Portland Bank, Louisville, Kentucky] (Portland Bank, branch of First National in Louisville, Kentucky. A crowd of men lines the front and side of the brick building. A sign at the corner of the building says "Portland Bank" A sign above the windows says "[ ] First National Bank.") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Kentucky National Guard Arsenal fire, Frankfort, Kentucky, 1933] (Arsenal of the Kentucky National Guard in Frankfort, Kentucky, engulfed in flames as fire services try to put out the fire and spectators look on. The arsenal caught on fire during the night of June 30, 1933, after an explosion on the second floor. The building held the state's munitions. On back of image: Fire at state arsenal.") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Kentucky National Guard Arsenal fire, Frankfort, Kentucky, 1933] (Close-up of fire at Arsenal building of the (Frankfort) Kentucky National Guard. The arsenal caught on fire during the night of June 30, 1933, after an explosion on the second floor. A cluster of men spray a fire hose at the smoke coming from the left side of the arsenal, and other men walk towards them. The arsenal caught on fire during the night of June 30, 1933, after an explosion on the second floor. The building held the state's munitions. On back of image: Fire at state arsenal.") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Kentucky National Guard Arsenal fire, Frankfort, Kentucky, 1933] (Interior of Arsenal building of the (Frankfort) Kentucky National Guard destroyed by fire. The arsenal caught on fire during the night of June 30, 1933, after an explosion on the second floor. The building held the state's munitions. On back of image: "Natl Guard Arsenal Frankfort, Ky after 1933 fire.") (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Mechanics working on airplane, Bowman Field, Louisville, Kentucky, 1935] (Seven mechanics work on an airplane in a hangar at Bowman Field, Louisville, Kentucky. The airfield, established in 1919 by Abram H. Bowman, is still in operation, although Standiford Field (now Louisville International Airport) took over commercial airline services. The National Register of Historic Places created the Bowman Field Historic District (consisting of the Administration Building and two original hangars) in 1988.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Silver House, Louisville, Kentucky, 1924] (Brainerd Lemon's Silver House, a Tudor-style house located at 223 East Broadway in Louisville, Kentucky, 1924. Two cars are parked in front, and a church is visible at right. Brainerd Lemon was a jeweler in Louisville.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Convent of the Good Shepherd, Louisville, Kentucky, 1931] (Convent of the Good Shepherd, a long, two-story building in Louisville, Kentucky, with a statue of Jesus holding a lamb and staff, photographed in 1931.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Fire Headquarters, Louisville, Kentucky] (Fire Headquarters, at Sixth and Jefferson Streets in Louisville, Kentucky, with a domed tower.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Flight crew, Bowman Field, Louisville, Kentucky, 1935] (A flight crew consisting of seven men (three in uniforms, four in leather jackets) pose with an airplane in the background at Bowman Field, Louisville, Kentucky. The airfield, established in 1919 by Abram H. Bowman, is still in operation, although Standiford Field (now Louisville International Airport) took over commercial airline services. The National Register of Historic Places created the Bowman Field Historic District (consisting of the Administration Building and two original hangars) in 1988.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [American Airlines biplane, Louisville, Kentucky, 1935] (Passengers, mostly men wearing suits and white hats with black bands, are greeted as they exit a large American Airlines biplane on the tarmac at Bowman Field, Louisville, Kentucky. The airfield, established in 1919 by Abram H. Bowman, is still in operation, although Standiford Field (now Louisville International Airport) took over commercial airline services. The National Register of Historic Places created the Bowman Field Historic District (consisting of the Administration Building and two original hangars) in 1988.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Airplane, Bowman Field, Louisville, Kentucky, 1936] (Airplane, propellers spinning, on grass at Bowman Field, Louisville, Kentucky. A man is standing on the left edge of the photo near the plane. The airfield, established in 1919 by Abram H. Bowman, is still in operation, although Standiford Field (now Louisville International Airport) took over commercial airline services. The Administration Building, along with two original hangars, was registered with the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Administration building architectural rendering, Bowman Field, Louisville, Kentucky, 1936] (Architectural rendering in pencil of the Administration Building at Bowman Field in Louisville, Kentucky. Stamp on back of image: "This photograph and any accompanying data are furnished free of charge by the Works Progress Administration in Kentucky. Full credit is requested, but at no time is this photograph to be sold or used to illustrate stories or data offered for sale." The airfield, established in 1919 by Abram H. Bowman, is still in operation, although Standiford Field (now Louisville International Airport) took over commercial airline services. The Administration Building, along with two original hangars, was registered with the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.) (on the Kentuckian Digital Library)
  • [Administration building groundbreaking, Bowman Field, Louisville, Kentucky, 1936] (Groundbreaking for the Administration Building, Bowman Field, Louisville, Kentucky. The dirt is being shoveled by a man in an overcoat and dark hat who is surrounded by men in suits and work uniforms. A small sign in the grass to the left says "USA Work Program WPA." Image printed backwards from negative. The airfield, established in 1919 by Abram H. Bowman, is still in operation, although Standiford Field (now Louisville International Airport) took over commercial airline services. The Administr