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Search Results 3831 to 3840 of 6265

  • Old Series Trademark No. 3710

    Condor Bakers Extra Flour

    Date: 1900

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0465

    [A star on a fish]

    Date: 1878

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2641

    White Navy

    Date: 1895

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0257

    Pipifax Magic Bitters

    Date: 1873

  • McCarthy Album 11, Photograph 001a

    This clipping from an unidentified newspaper or newsletter features a 1946 article by A. L. Simon called "How To Run A Bridge." The article discusses the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, opened ten years before the article was written.

    Date: 1946

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2825

    Pavilion Auction House

    Date: 1896

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0358

    Eureka

    Date: 1876

  • McCarthy Album 09, Photograph 014

    Caption: "Yellowstone Transportation Bus," c. 1923. William and Grace McCarthy (second row from the back, middle and right-hand seats) and a group of unidentified people stop for a photograph while sitting in an eleven-passenger, open-roofed touring bus in Yellowstone National Park. The touring bus, likely made by White Motor Company, was one of a fleet of such vehicles maintained by the Yellowstone Park Transportation Company.

    Date: 1923

  • McCarthy Album 05, Photograph 054

    Caption: "Skaggs Springs," c. 1914. William and Grace McCarthy (fourth and fifth from the left) standing on a log with a group of unidentified friends and family in the Skaggs Springs area of Sonoma County. Skaggs Springs was a resort area along the Russian River, known for its hot springs. The area now lies beneath the waters of Lake Sonoma, flooded after construction of the Warm Springs Dam, completed in 1982.

    Date: 1914

  • McCarthy Album 09, Photograph 056

    Caption: "Mammoth Springs Resort. - Yellowstone," c. 1923. William and Grace McCarthy pose in front of the Mammoth Springs Resort with three unidentified people. Originally called the National Hotel, the building opened for business in 1883. It underwent significant alterations and renovations between 1911 and 1913, by which time the resort was known as the Mammoth Hot Springs Hotel. The hotel was torn down in 1936 in favor of a more modern facility.

    Date: 1923