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Search Results 3761 to 3770 of 7317

  • McCarthy Album 10, Photograph 330

    No Caption: Pictured is Yosemite master basket weaver, Lucy Parker Telles, a Mono Lake Paiute, who lived at Yosemite and Mono Lake. Telles was one of a group of Mono-Paiute women renowned for the artistry of their stunning baskets, many of which they sold to Yosemite visitors. Here, Telles poses with her beautiful 36" basket, which took her four years to complete, and which captured first prize at the 1933 World's Fair in Chicago. 1935.

    Date: 1935

  • Old Series Trademark No. 1633

    Star and Crescent Brand

    Date: 1888

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2916

    Pilot Brand

    Date: 1897

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0844

    Knife and Fork

    Date: 1882

  • Correspondence on Japanese Residents

    Correspondence from B. Lawrence to Earl Warren regarding just treatment for returning Japanese residents

    Date: March 1, 1943

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2205a

    Young America

    Date: 1892

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2495

    Flavoring Extract

    Date: 1894

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0702

    Semper Idem

    Date: 1881

  • McCarthy Album 11, Photograph x006

    Caption: "Delaware & Hudson R.R. Exhibit. Chicago. Sept. 21, 1934. First Locomotive to Operate on an American Railroad, August 8, 1829." View of a replica of the Stourbridge Lion, the first steam locomotive to operate in the U.S., on lines built by the Delaware and Hudson Railway (formerly the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company). The replica was displayed at the 1934 Century of Progress Exposition, celebrating Chicago's one-hundred year anniversary of incorporation. This photograph was loose in the box with Album 11.

    Date: 9/21/1934

  • McCarthy Album 11, Photograph 028

    Caption: "Pima Indian Children and Their Hut, Made from Bush Branches, Sacaton Indian Reservation, Sacaton, Arizona. May 24, 1934." Several children of the Akimel O'odham (Pima) tribe in front of a hut made with tree branches and wood beams, its walls and roof thatched in brush. Located south of Phoenix and including the town of Sacaton, the Gila River Indian Reservation is home to members of the Akimel O’odham (Pima) and the Pee-Posh (Maricopa) tribes. The reservation was established in 1859. Eighty years later, in 1939, Congress provided for the self-governance of the reservation via the Gila River Indian Community.

    Date: 5/24/1934