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approximately 333 photographs in 1 album
The Amy Kelty photograph album contains approximately 333 photographs documenting the professional and personal life of Michigan woman Amy G. Kelty, including from her time spent as an instructor at the Mount Pleasant Indian Industrial School.
The album (28 x 36 cm) has black covers and is itself in poor condition while the photographs are largely undamaged. Images of interest include pictures of Kelty's children Genevieve (1888-1953), Mary (1890-1964), and John Neil (1898-1980) engaged in various activities shown mostly from teenage to adult years; views of Mount Pleasant Industrial School buildings as well as school events with pupils and staff; views of buildings at Central State Normal School, the teaching college attended by Kelty and her daughters; views of Michigan Mining College which her son attended; and scenes from Kelty's later life including trips to the Grand Canyon, Black Hills, Alaska, Colorado, and Washington State as well as her graduation from the University of California at Berkley in 1925. Also present are earlier studio portrait photographs of various relatives from the 1880s and 1890s.
approximately 235 photographs and 1 booklet in 1 album
The Electric railway engineer photograph album consists of approximately 235 photographs and 1 booklet documenting the professional and personal life of an unidentified railway engineer specializing in electric rail line infrastructure.
The album (25.5 x 30.5 cm) has dark green cloth covers with “Photographs” stamped on the front cover. All of the album pages are loose and fairly brittle, but the images are in generally good condition.
The first page contains sixteen signatures from participants in the 30th reunion of the Union College class of 1885. Subsequent photographs include several views of Union College campus, aspects of student life (including dorm room interiors and a group of portraits showing crossdressing men captioned “Minstrels"), and formal portraits of members of the Kappa Alpha Society in the mid-1880s, presumably including some of the attendees at the reunion whose signatures are represented.
The unidentified presumed compiler of the album can be seen in several photographs. He appears to have been an engineer specializing in infrastructure projects for electric-powered rail systems and was active in the early stages of when railroads in the United States were moving towards electrification. Many of the smaller circular photographs found throughout in the album were likely produced by a Kodak No. 2 camera, while larger format prints and cyanotypes are also present.
Contents are arranged chronologically starting with the compiler's student days before focusing on various professional assignments and elements of his personal life. During the ten years following his graduation from Union College the compiler apparently participated in several railroad development projects, mainly in what would become Washington State but also in Kansas, Oklahoma, and Idaho. Photographs from this period of his life include views of survey camps along the Columbia River and other regional waterways, interior and exterior views of the compiler’s home in Tacoma, portraits of his growing family, and snapshots of Klickitat people (including a group portrait of three women picking hops). By 1896 the compiler and his family appear to have moved back east, settling in New Rochelle, New York. Photographs from this period include documentation of projects on intercity lines on Staten Island and other nearby boroughs, a project in upstate New York, and numerous images of friends and family. The Albany and Hudson Railway and Power Company’s new electric train line to various towns between Hudson and Albany required establishing power sources along the route. As a small group of photographs in this album show, this necessitated constructing a dam at Stuyvesant Falls on the Kinderhook Creek which would provide electric power to the rail line and various local businesses. The final pages of the album document the construction of Hudson Park Dock in New Rochelle as well as leisure activities such as the 1906 Vanderbilt Cup auto races and a naval review in Oyster Bay.
A total of 18 loose photographs are included towards the back of the album. Images include a group portrait of Union College students from the 1880s, a studio portrait of a young woman and infant taken in the mid-1890s in Tacoma, and a double exposure of a woman standing next to an automobile in Jacksonville, Florida, in 1918. Also present is a printed pamphlet replete with numerous halftone reproduction images titled “Letter from Mayor Clarke to the Voters of New Rochelle with Pictures of Improvements Under His Administration” which highlights several civic infrastructure projects (including the Hudson Park Dock) undertaken during the tenure of mayor Henry Clarke.
Electric Railway Engineer Photograph Album, ca. 1882-1918
approximately 235 photographs and 1 booklet in 1 album
1 volume
Marion Shipley compiled this volume while a pre-adolescent and teenager in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. She made collages and colored pencil drawings of domestic scenes, exteriors of residences and gardens, animals, and more. The volume also includes diary entries relating to her social life, humor, and experiences at a school at or near the Naval Academy in Portsmouth. She wrote about getting in trouble in class, passing notes, and flirtatious or romantic relationships. Shipley also pasted and laid in correspondence sent to her by young men courting her, and she added brief comments in the volume speaking to her current romantic interests. Several newspaper clippings also feature male actors and royalty, providing additional information about teenage romantic exploration.
The first page is inscribed "Marion Shipley's Picture Book. Naval Academy, November 1898," and is followed by a section of drawings and collaged scenes. The collages include colored pencil drawings of the exterior of residences and gardens; a river scene with boats, bridges, and monuments; a church; a tent (an exhibition tent?); a circus; a kitchen; and living rooms. These have printed clippings of animals, furniture, boats, women and children, crowds, circus entertainers, cars and wagons, and vegetation pasted in. One loose page tipped into the volume is titled "THE FAMILY NEXT DOOR!!!" and features clippings of young children crying, swearing, and being spanked, with added pencil annotations. Other pages are filled with colored pencil drawings of birds and animals, a fishing boat, a horse-drawn vehicle, buildings, a decorated tree, and faces.
Shipley also documented the social life of adolescent boys and girls in her circle, in particular their play at school and their emerging romantic interests. Page 35 is dated June 1, 1907, and is labelled "PRIVET. NO TRESPASSING. ALL RIGHTS RESERED [sic]. For Spelling & Writing." It is followed by a diary entry dated June 7, 1907, describing Shipley's day at school, where she commented on having a substitute teacher, getting in trouble, disliking spelling, and drawing pictures of each other's backs and passing it in the class. The passed note is laid into the volume, featuring six pencil drawings of the back of girls' heads to show their hairstyles, each identified by the girl's names and age. One is of Shipley. She used rebus drawings and numerical substitutes to replace foul language (e.g. "7734" for "Hell"). On page 39, Shipley recorded her favorite expression of 1907, "23 SKIDOO & STUNG," and noted students in her school passing slips pairing boys and girls who apparently liked each other. She claimed to not "like any of the boys in the whole school" of about 400 students. This is followed by two columns of names, one for boys and the other for girls.
Shipley included a number of love letters sent to her. On pages 37 and 38 she affixed five letters (by pasting in the envelopes) from Ralph Dana, sent during his stay at the Hawthorne Inn of Gloucester, Massachusetts, from July to September, 1906. He wrote of local entertainments, engagements with friends, his romantic interest in her, guarded concerns about her activities and who she was spending time with, and his suspicion that she did not reciprocate his feelings. Shipley wrote beneath the letters: "These are some letters I got from who was my best fellow. He is not now. My letter were just as bad to his as his were to me. Now I just love H. S. C. (His picture is in the back of my watch) & have every since June of 1907 & this is Jan. 1908." Shipley also laid in nine pieces of correspondence from a suitor named John, mostly dated from early February 1908. They profess his love for her, ask if she loves him, and request kisses. One is on a piece of paper cut in the shape of a heart, and three others include hearts and arrows painted in gold metallic paint. One letter signed "Fred" is addressed to "K," expressing excitement about her upcoming visit and requesting a photo of a beautiful girl. A doily and a page from a calendar with a quote from the Merchant of Venice is also tipped into the volume.
The final diary entry is written on page 41, where Shipley notes attending Hamlet, which she mentioned liking almost as much as Peter Pan. Elsewhere in the volume, Shipley tipped in newspaper clippings of the actor E. H. Sothern and Dom Manuel II, King of Portugal.
1 volume
This diary (1 volume) contains Rhoda B. Stoker's recollections of a car trip she took with her family in August 1935. They traveled from Salt Lake City, Utah, to Idaho, Oregon, Washington, British Columbia, California, and Nevada. The volume includes family and travel photographs from 1920, 1924, 1933, and 1935. The volume, comprised of two ruled spiral notebooks bound together with yarn, contains around 170 pages of material: the first 46 pages (recto) are numbered 1-[46], and the remaining pages (verso) are numbered [47-183].
Stoker's narrative (pages 1-[46]) recounts the trip she took with her son Edwin and "Aunt Clara King" from August 4, 1935-August 20, 1935. The family traveled by car from their home in Salt Lake City, Utah, to Vancouver, British Columbia, and followed the Pacific Coast south to Los Angeles, California. On their return journey, they drove from Los Angeles to Salt Lake City via the Mojave Desert and Las Vegas, Nevada. Stoker recorded details about the group's experiences and expenses, including the names of restaurants they visited, the car's odometer reading, and the amount and cost of gasoline they purchased; she combined all trip expenses at the end of her account (p. [46]). Stoker described the scenery and cities they visited, including San Francisco and Los Angeles, and discussed traveling by car ferry.
Stoker pasted photographs and postcards into her diary, sometimes including descriptions of photos she intended to add. Most images have captions, which include information about the location, date, and photographer. The pictures depict the Stoker family, their companions, and scenery from trips to the Pacific Coast in the summers of 1933 and 1935, including the family's lodgings, redwood trees, bridges, steamers, car ferries, military boats and submarines, and the family's car. One series of photographs depicts animals (prepared with taxidermy) at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. Painted postcards and postcard sets show cities such as Tijuana, Mexico; San Diego, California; Portland, Oregon; Seattle, Washington; and Victoria, British Columbia, as well as scenes from California's Pacific coastline.
approximately 22,890 photographs (including 18,500 stereographs), 1220 prints, 13 photograph albums, 11 books, 117 pieces of ephemera, 15 pieces of realia
The Robert M. Vogel collection of historic images of engineering & industry contains approximately 22,890 photographs (including 18,500 stereographs), 1220 prints, 13 photograph albums, 11 books, 117 pieces of ephemera, and 15 pieces of realia documenting a wide range of subjects primarily related to 19th-century civil engineering, industrial processes, and mechanization.
Particularly well-represented topics within the Vogel collection include images of different types of civil infrastructure such as bridges, canals, roads, dams, and tunnels as well as images showing construction projects, various types of machinery, modes of transportation (such as railroads, steamboats, automobiles, etc.), agricultural pursuits, natural resource extraction (including oil drilling, quarrying, mining, and lumbering), textile operations, electrical and hydraulic power generation, manufacturing, metal working, machine shops, and various industrial factory scenes. Many images of important and iconic structures are included such as the Brooklyn Bridge, Panama Canal, Hoosac Tunnel, and SS Great Eastern. Other represented topics include general architectural views, scenes of disasters/accidents, and portraits of notable individuals (such as Thomas Edison, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, and Robert Stephenson). While predominately United States-focused, the materials are international in scope overall and especially include many images of industrial sites and civil infrastructure in Great Britain. The order of the collection's original arrangement has largely been kept intact.
Examples of items of particular interest include salt prints possibly taken by civil engineer Montgomery C. Meigs documenting the construction of the U.S. Capitol and Washington Aqueduct in Washington, D.C.; a series of portraits of early Baldwin Locomotive Works locomotives; images documenting the SS Great Eastern and USS Niagara steamships; a group of 4 colored stereoviews on glass produced by Frederick Langenheim showing the Niagara Falls Suspension Bridge ca. 1850s; images related to specific railroads including the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, Mauch Chunk, Mount Washington Cog Railway, and New York City elevated railroad; and half-frame proof prints of stereographs produced by Underwood & Underwood as well as H. C. White & Co.
The following list represents the general subject categories found across the Vogel collection along with relevant box and folder numbers:
- Box 07.2
- Box 14.1
- Box 14.2
- Box 14.3
- Box 31.2
- Box 52
- Box 56
- Folder 2.10
- Folder 3.08
- Box 06.2
- Box 06.3
- Folder 1.08
- Folder 2.15
- Box 01.1
- Box 03.3
- Box 06.3
- Box 07.1
- Box 28.2
- Box 28.3
- Box 46.2
- Box 57
- Box 58
- Box 59
- Box 61
- Box 63.10
- Folder 1.04
- Folder 2.04
- Folder 2.09
- Folder 2.14
- Folder 2.15
- Folder 2.16
- Folder 3.08
- Box 06.1
- Box 06.2
- Folder 2.06
- Box 03.1
- Box 03.2
- Folder 2.17
- Folder 3.08
- Box 03.3
- Box 04.1
- Box 04.2
- Box 04.3
- Box 05.3
- Box 05.4
- Box 06.1
- Folder 3.08
- Box 05.1
- Box 01.1
- Box 01.2
- Box 01.3
- Box 02.1
- Box 02.2
- Box 28.3
- Box 43.2
- Folder 3.02
- Folder 3.08
- Folder 3.10
- Box 02.3
- Box 05.2
- Box 06.1
- Box 49.1
- Box 49.2
- Box 09.1
- Box 09.2
- Box 36.1
- Box 36.2
- Box 39.1
- Box 08.2
- Box 08.3
- Box 18.4
- Box 28.1
- Box 28.3
- Box 46.1
- Box 53.2
- Box 58
- Box 61
- Box 63.08
- Box 63.11
- Folder 1.03
- Folder 2.16
- Folder 2.17
- Box 06.3
- Box 17.3
- Box 20.1
- Box 24.3
- Box 25.1
- Box 28.1
- Box 41.1
- Box 54
- Box 57
- Folder 1.07
- Folder 2.16
- Box 11.2
- Box 45.2
- Box 27.1
- Box 27.2
- Box 27.3
- Box 39.2
- Box 46.1
- Box 46.2
- Box 56
- Box 57
- Box 58
- Box 59
- Box 63.02
- Box 63.03
- Box 64.1
- Folder 1.05
- Folder 1.11
- Folder 1.13
- Folder 2.04
- Folder 2.11
- Folder 2.17
- Folder 3.08
- Box 07.2
- Box 07.3
- Box 08.1
- Box 08.2
- Box 28.1
- Box 28.2
- Box 43.2
- Box 46.3
- Box 52
- Box 54
- Box 56
- Box 57
- Box 59
- Box 63.04
- Box 64.2
- Box 64.4
- Folder 1.09
- Folder 2.05
- Folder 2.10
- Folder 2.12
- Folder 2.17
- Folder 3.08
- Box 07.1
- Box 07.2
- Box 13.2
- Box 13.3
- Box 14.1
- Box 27.2
- Box 27.3
- Box 31.2
- Box 32
- Box 33.1
- Box 33.2
- Box 34
- Box 35
- Box 36.1
- Box 37
- Box 39.2
- Box 40
- Box 41.2
- Box 42
- Box 43.1
- Box 43.2
- Box 46.2
- Box 53.1
- Box 53.2
- Box 60.1
- Box 61
- Box 63.01
- Box 63.03
- Box 64.1
- Box 64.3
- Folder 1.03
- Folder 1.07
- Folder 2.05
- Folder 2.06
- Folder 2.11
- Folder 2.15
- Folder 3.03
- Folder 3.08
- Folder 3.09
- Folder 3.12
- Box 15.1
- Box 43.2
- Box 44
- Box 55.1
- Box 55.2
- Box 60.1
- Box 60.2
- Box 62
- Folder 1.01
- Folder 1.02
- Folder 1.12
- Folder 3.07
- Box 11.2
- Box 11.3
- Box 12.1
- Box 12.2
- Box 13.2
- Box 23.1
- Box 61
- Folder 2.05
- Box 11.2
- Box 12.2
- Box 14.2
- Box 63.07
- Box 12.2
- Box 12.3
- Box 12.4
- Box 13.1
- Box 13.2
- Box 37
- Box 46.2
- Box 57
- Box 58
- Box 21.3
- Box 22.1
- Box 22.2
- Box 22.3
- Box 28.1
- Box 39.2
- Box 61
- Folder 2.14
- Folder 2.15
- Folder 3.08
- Box 23.1
- Box 23.2
- Box 23.3
- Box 24.1
- Box 24.2
- Box 40
- Box 41.2
- Box 50.1
- Box 50.2
- Box 51
- Box 52
- Box 55.1
- Box 55.2
- Box 61
- Folder 1.03
- Folder 2.02
- Folder 2.05
- Folder 2.14
- Folder 3.02
- Folder 3.10
- Box 29.1
- Box 29.2
- Box 30
- Box 46.1
- Box 57
- Folder 1.07
- Box 24.3
- Box 25.1
- Box 25.2
- Box 25.3
- Box 26.1
- Box 26.2
- Box 26.3
- Box 27.1
- Box 27.3
- Box 37
- Box 38
- Box 39.2
- Box 40
- Box 41.1
- Box 42
- Box 46.3
- Box 64.1
- Folder 3.06
- Box 10.3
- Box 11.1
- Box 11.2
- Box 41.2
- Folder 3.05
- Folder 3.12
- Box 01.1
- Box 10.3
- Box 28.3
- Box 39.1
- Box 46.3
- Box 56
- Box 64.2
- Box 64.3
- Folder 2.15
- Folder 3.06
- Folder 3.07
- Box 08.1
- Box 28.1
- Box 46.3
- Box 64.2
- Box 09.3
- Box 10.1
- Box 10.2
- Box 10.3
- Box 39.1
- Box 34
- Box 42
- Box 56
- Box 63.07
- Folder 2.16
- Box 15.1
- Box 28.2
- Box 31.2
- Box 33.2
- Box 36.2
- Box 54
- Box 58
- Box 64.3
- Folder 2.16
- Folder 3.04
- Box 19.1
- Box 19.2
- Box 19.3
- Box 20.1
- Box 20.2
- Box 20.3
- Box 21.1
- Box 21.2
- Box 21.3
- Box 28.2
- Box 45.2
- Box 46.3
- Box 57
- Box 59
- Box 63.09
- Folder 2.08
- Folder 2.11
- Folder 2.14
- Folder 3.05
- Folder 3.07
- Folder 3.08
- Box 15.1
- Box 15.2
- Box 15.3
- Box 16.1
- Box 16.2
- Box 16.3
- Box 16.4
- Box 17.1
- Box 17.2
- Box 17.3
- Box 18.1
- Box 18.2
- Box 18.3
- Box 18.4
- Box 28.1
- Box 28.2
- Box 31.1
- Box 35
- Box 46.2
- Box 47
- Box 48.1
- Box 48.2
- Box 49.1
- Box 56
- Box 57
- Box 58
- Box 59
- Box 61
- Box 63.05
- Box 63.06
- Folder 1.06
- Folder 1.10
- Folder 2.01
- Folder 2.03
- Folder 2.04
- Folder 2.06
- Folder 2.07
- Folder 2.10
- Folder 2.13
- Folder 2.16
- Folder 3.04
- Folder 3.07
- Folder 3.10
- Folder 3.11
- Folder 3.12
- Box 28.2
- Box 43.1
- Box 43.2
- Box 45.1
- Box 45.2
- Folder 2.06
- Box 08.1
- Box 08.2
- Box 25.1
- Box 28.3
- Box 39.1
- Box 39.2
- Box 46.3
- Box 53.2
- Box 56
- Box 57
- Box 59
- Box 64.2
- Box 64.4
- Folder 1.04
- Folder 2.04
- Folder 2.15
- Folder 2.16
While the Vogel collection general subject categories are generally comprehensive there are still numerous instances of items that could feasibly belong to multiple categories other than the group they are classified under. For instance, there are disaster images found in several groupings other than "Disasters," while bridge construction images can be found in all of the various "Bridges" categories as well as within the "Construction" category. For more detailed descriptions of specific materials, see the box and folder listing in the Contents section below.
Robert M. Vogel Collection of Historic Images of Engineering & Industry, ca. 1850s-2004 (majority within ca. 1850s-1900)
approximately 22,890 photographs (including 18,500 stereographs), 1220 prints, 13 photograph albums, 11 books, 117 pieces of ephemera, 15 pieces of realia
27 items
This collection (27 items) contains a diary, a 4-volume manuscript autobiography, 8 newspaper clippings, 2 court documents, and 15 photographs related to the life of William Flick, a manual laborer.
Between November 2, 1916, and January 30, 1917, William Flick kept a Diary detailing his travels on an Illinois canal, his hunting expeditions, and his work as a clam digger. He wrote about traveling with his brother, Albert, and working on his boat.
William Flick's Autobiography, composed in 4 spiral-bound notebooks in 1958, begins with his birth in 1872 and documents his work and movements throughout his teenage and adult years. In his narrative, which he claimed to have written "because I don't think any one [sic] around here has made a success of as many ocupations [sic] as I have," Flick reminisced about his family, jobs, and acquaintances in Illinois, Oregon, and Idaho, and shared observations about his life. The final volume of the autobiography contains Flick's reflections on some of the technological and social changes he witnessed during his lifetime.
The Documents and Newspaper Clippings series (10 items) contains a summons and a deposition from Ogle County, Illinois, related to Albert Flick, as well as 8 newspaper clippings related to William Flick and his family. The clippings document family news and deaths, including the accidental death of Flick's daughter Flossie.
Fifteen Photographs depict William Flick and his family, including several taken during Flick's time as a logger in Creswell, Oregon, and as a clam digger in Illinois, as well as one taken in front of a carpenter's shop in Chicago, Illinois. One portrait shows Marlow Flick in his Navy uniform. Four items are photographic postcards.