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Search Results 5821 to 5830 of 5886

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0920

    California Favorite

    Date: 1882

  • Old Series Trademark No. 1379

    Appeal

    Date: 1886

  • McCarthy Album 08, Photograph 146

    Caption: "Old Landmark, Seaside, Or.," c. 1910. Shows a picket fence erected around what a sign calls "Remains of Cairn where Lewis & Clark made salt from the ocean water Jan. & Feb. 1806." When the famous expedition led by Merriweather Lewis and William Clark reached the Pacific Ocean in late 1805, their supplies had run dangerously low, including their salt supply. Salt, used not only to flavor meat but also to preserve it, was extremely important to the health of the expedition. Three of Lewis and Clark's men traveled to a site on the coast near present-day Seaside, Oregon to set up a small salt-works, boiling ocean water in a series of large kettles and then scraping the resulting salt crust off of the sides. In this manner, the men eventually collected about twenty gallons of salt before Lewis and Clark decided the supply was sufficient for the return journey. In 1910, the property containing the remains of the cairns was deeded to the Oregon Historical Society. In 1955, replica salt cairns were built at the site by the Lions Club to commemorate the expedition's activities.

    Date: 1910

  • Land- Monterey county, or Lomas del Carmelo or Meadows Tract Rancho

    Hand-drawn sketch map of Land- Monterey county, or Lomas del Carmelo or Meadows Tract boundaries. Volume 1, page 520.

    Date: 1839

  • "Excerpt from Victory"

    Excerpt from article entitled "Qualified Residents May leave Japanese Centers to Work" regarding leave from relocation centers; referenced in Unmarked Correspondence (F3729_65_007a)

    Date: August 4, 1942

  • Old Series Trademark No. 1201

    Star of the Kitchen

    Date: 1884

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0362

    Imperial Mousseux

    Date: 1876

  • McCarthy Album 08, Photograph 088

    Caption: "Fort Ward, Wash.," c. 1908-1912. View from Puget Sound of a wharf and other buildings of Fort Ward. Originally known as Bean Point, Fort Ward was established by the U.S. Army Coastal Artillery Corps in 1890. Re-named Fort Ward in 1903, the facility included four coastal batteries designed to assist in protecting Puget Sound and the nearby Naval Shipyard from enemy attack. Fort Ward was placed on inactive status in the 1920s, but was revived by the U.S. Navy during World War II. The Navy discovered the fort's location was ideal for listening to radio communications from Japan, and it subsequently became a top secret listening post with a link directly to Washington, D.C. The Navy continued the fort's use as a listening post until 1956, when it was again taken over by the U.S. Army. The Army subsequently stopped all activity in 1958, ultimately selling portions of the fort to the Washington State Park System in 1960. It is now a state park.

    Date: 1908

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2184

    Uncle Sam Brand

    Date: 1892

  • Memorial to Viola Fauver Gregg Liuzzo, page 1

    This item has no description.

    Date: 2010