6,220 research outputs found

    Home of W.H. Lee on Harvard Ave., Seattle, 1907

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    This postcard shows the home of W.H. Lee at 1819 Harvard Avenue in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Seattle. According to the 1907 city directory, the Reverend Wallace H. Lee was the assistant pastor of the First Presbyterian Church. Lee lived at the house on Harvard Avenue with his wife Elizabeth and four children. Suviah and Roger Pierce (or Peirce) also lived at this address. Writing on the back of the postcard identifies the two people pictured in front of the house as W.H. Lee and "Aunt Suvie Pierce." As of 2018, the house at 1819 Harvard still stands, with the original leaded front windows still in place.Handwritten on back of postcard: 1819 Harvard Ave. Seattle Oc. '07 // Home of W.H. Lee Seattle. Aunt Suvie Pierce, W.H. Lee1 photographic postcard: b&w; 3.5 x 5.

    Horses loaded with packs of pipes, Walhalla, Victoria, 1906? [picture] /

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    Title devised by cataloguer based on inscriptions and acquisition documentation.; Inscriptions: "Packs, 29. W.H. Lee, Walhalla"--Printed in white on image, lower right.; Part of the collection: Lee collection of photographs of the Walhalla region, Victoria.; Condition: Stained.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4764458; Donated by Bruce Howard, 2009

    Photograph: Group Portrait, W.H. Alexander Tailoring Class

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    Image of two rows of men and a woman sitting and standing, holding tailoring tools and a sign. Sign: W.H. ALEXANDER TAILORING CLASS TERRELL TEX 2-28. No year visible. One of 156 black and white photographs by R. Lee Thomas, an African American photographer active in the early twentieth century in the southern United States. Thomas’ work provides photographic documentation of southern black social life, primarily religious and labor groups, circa 1946-1949. The majority of the photographs depict groups from Birmingham, Alabama, and adjacent areas. His imprint contains the caption: Made by R. Lee Thomas, Mound Bayou, Mississippi, The Oldest Negro Town in America.https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/rthomas/1034/thumbnail.jp

    Plan showing allotments, South Hythe, Parramatta River, Municipality of Drummoyne [cartographic material] /

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    Sales plan within the suburb of Drummoyne showing a series of numbered blocks some of which are being extended from land reclamation on the foreshores. The area involved is bordered by Parramatta River, Five Dock Bay and Cambridge Road and divided by Bridge Road [i.e. Victoria Road] at a time when the electric tram line had been established (between 1900 and 1906) as well as partly by Clarendon St.; "Torrens title".; "Special terms to suit buyers".; Oriented with north at top of map.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.map-lfsp754
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