Search William M. McCarthy Photograph Collection
- Filters:
- Language
- English 3077
- Type
- Still Image 3077
Search Results 451 to 460 of 3080
-
Caption: "Main Street, Port Townsend.," c. 1908-1912. Street scene in Washington's Port Townsend, on the tip of the Olympic Peninsula on the shores of Puget Sound.
Date: 1908
-
Caption: "Market St. S.F." See also 96-07-08-alb06-197 with caption: "Building up on Market Street, c. 1907. A view of repairs being made to Market Street, after the damage of the 1906 earthquake.
Date: 1907
-
Caption: "Entrance - Mariposa Grove- Yosemite," c. 1917. Grace McCarthy stands with an automobile near the entrance to Maripose Grove in Yosemite National Park. The Mariposa Grove, near Wawona, is the largest grove of Giant Sequoia trees in Yellowstone National Park. It also includes two of the thirty largest Giant Sequoias in the world.
Date: 1917
-
No Caption: A view of the Tower of Jewels and street lamps at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition.
Date: 1915
-
Caption: "Santa Cruz," c. 1920. Group of unidentified people on a beach in Santa Cruz, including Grace McCarthy (far right).
Date: 1920
-
Caption: "Machinery Palace," at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition.
Date: 1915
-
No caption, c. 1930. Football stadium filled with fans for a game, with a marching band on the field at the lower center of the photograph. The stadium is unidentified, but may be University of California, Berkeley's California Memorial Stadium, built in 1923.
Date: 1930
-
Caption: "Fountain of Energy and Tower," (A. Stirling Calder, sculptor), at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition.
Date: 1915
-
No caption. William McCarthy and unidentified woman embrace while sitting in a wicker chair in front of the John Shields residence in the Daybreak Estate area of Long Island.
Date: 1934
-
Caption: "Hopland-Clear Lake Highway," c. 1925. Birdseye view of the Hopland Grade (also called the Hopland Pass), now part of California State Route 175 connecting Hopland (Mendocino County) with Lakeport on Clear Lake, in Lake County. The road, built in the early 1920s, is sometimes called the "crookedest road in California."
Date: 1925