Back to top
  • CSV Spreadsheet
(1 - 50 of 2,647)

Pages


Official first day of issue. Honoring Martin Luther King, 1929-1968. Distinguished civil rights leader. Recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. Black Heritage USA Series. [graphic]

Official first day of issue. Honoring Harriet Tubman, 1821-1913. Abolitionist. Nurse. Escapded slave. Black Heritage USA Series. [graphic]

Official first day of issue. Honoring Salem Poor, Gallant Soldier, distinguished patriot of Bunker Hill, Valley Forge and White Plains. [graphic]

The nation honors a great American. "From slave cabin to hall of fame." Booker Washington Bookplace, Virginia. U.S. Post Office established February 12, 1948. [graphic]

Bladen's Court, looking south and out to Elfreth's Alley, Philadelphia, Pa.

Elfreth's Alley, looking west towards Second Street. Philadelphia, Pa.

Library Company of Philadelphia scrapbook

[Chamberlin weather strips trade cards]

Philadelphia -- The new Delaware River Bridge -- Camden. We insure anything. Try us. This is a darn good blotter. T. Yorke Smith, 507 Federal St., Camden N.J. Real estate insurance. Both phones 316.

Children of all nations. A series of 50. [graphic].

Joseph Kailler, carpenter and builder, 520 Mifflin St., Phila., Pa.

Library Company of Philadelphia scrapbook

Cars loaded with cotton bales on levee near cotton growing district, Texas.

Loading a Mississippi steamer, New Orleans U.S.A.

Greatest rosin market in the world, Savannah, Ga.

Cotton plantation scene.

[Crowd outside the Evening Telegraph Building]

[Crowd outside the Evening Telegraph office, Betz Building, South Broad Street, Philadelphia]

[Crowd outside the Public Ledger Building, 600-606 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia]

School gardens as a practical educational method - showing Boy Scouts and Camp Fire Girls, Philadelphia, Pa.

Down where

Sugar Cane plantation

William H. Rau, president. Photographers for the Pennsylvania Railroad and the Lehigh Valley Railroad. Rau Art Studios, Inc., photographers, 238 South Camac St., Philadelphia.

C.C. Whitenack, commercial photographer, 1944 N. Camac Street, Philadelphia

What the wild waves are saying. Dainty miss, of germs be wary is your towel sanitary? Is it pure, and sweet and fair, like the ocean and the air? Is it soft - yet giving vim - when you rub down from your swim? If it's all this, maid so chary, then it's su

Liberty Bell, State House, Philadelphia.

The old Liberty Bell, Independence Hall, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.

Coining presses. Government Mint, Philadelphia, Pa.

General view of the erecting shop, Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.

Spinning room - Winding bobbins with woolen yarn for weaving, Philadelphia, Pa.

Salvation Army Home, 5415 Lansdowne Avenue, Phila. [graphic] / William H. Rau, Phila.

Washington birthday greetings [graphic].

The joys of winter on the Wissahickon Drive, Philadelphia.

Surrounded by the flower gems of Autumn, Horticultural Hall, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.

Independence Hall, where Declaration of Independence was signed in 1776, Philadelphia, Pa.

Independence Hall, where Declaration of Independence was signed 1776, Philadelphia, Pa.

The old Liberty Bell, Independence Hall, Philadelphia, Pa.

Elk's Convention, Phila. July 15-21, 1907. "Dutch Disturbers," Kansas City display.

Elks Convention, 1907.

The Court of Honor during the Elks' greatest parade, Philadelphia, July 18, 1907.

House of refuge (girls), 22nd & Girard, Phila. [graphic].

Quaker City Construction Co. limited. Artificial stone and fire proof material a specialty. Factory and office. 3870 Lancaster Avenue. Philadelphia.

Lover's Lane, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pa.

Beautiful basin and gardens before Horticultural Hall, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pa.

"Is that tooth mine?"

The Wissahickon Drive crowded with one-horse sleighs, Philadelphia, Penna.

Independence Hall, which first proclaimed Freedom, as "government by the people," -- Philadelphia.

A beautiful garden avenue in Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pa.

"You brazen huzzy! You shall leave at this hour! And the least of your fault is the wasted flour."

Snowbound, Wissahickon Creek, Philadelphia.

Pages