Back to top

Bird's eye view Philadelphia, from LaPierre House.

Washington Senate Chamber.

Terra cotta ware, Portugese [sic] sec.

Masonic Temple on Chestnut St. between 7th & 8th Sts. Phil. Pa.

United States Naval Asylum, Gray's Ferry Road.

G. & H. Barnett, Black Diamond File Works, 39, 41 & 43 Richmond Street, Philadelphia.

Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia. 1876.

Instantaneous view of Elm Avenue, Philadelphia, July 4th 1876.

South Broad Street postcards.

River scene.

Girard College with statue of Stephen Girard.

Philadelphia, north from State House

[Chestnut Street between Sixth and Seventh streets; construction]

Porcelain ware, Japanese Court.

Church, Broad & Arch Sts., Phila. (Methodist) New Masonic Temple in the background.

Views of construction of New City Building, Philadelphia, John McArthur, Jr., architect.

Memorial of the International Exhibition at Philadelphia. 1876.

Said Peter Stuyvesant, "Welcome, friends, you would find our living rougher had we knickerbockers not learned to use the Enterprise sausage stuffer."

Said Jackson at New Orleans, "Boys we'll each one turn explorer, and make a raid on the enemy's stores with the Enterprise Bung Borer."

In seventy six, that old Continental; that Fourth-of-July-m'an; hatchet-can't-lie-man gave orders for dinner, "and said "use Enterprise beef shaver, for beef so sliced, will meet with much favor."

Horace Greely, to his farmer friends, one day, said "How needlessly man often labors, use the Enterprise Sprinkler, that is the proper way, and give up the watering pot, neighbors."

"I found when a grocer's boy," Honest Abe said "Prosperity's line, if you'd cross it, give always good measure, save labor and use the self measuring, Enterprise faucet."

In 1773 in Boston town was spilled the tea. These are not Indians that you see, but patriots fighting tyranny; they spilled the tea, then drank their fill of coffee ground in Enterprise mill.

[John Mundell & Co. trade cards]

Ph. J. Lauber's restaurant, Centennial grounds, near Horticultural Hall.

[Philadelphia Evening Bulletin trade cards]

"Tippecanoe and Tyler too," was the cry they raised in forty two, when barrels were set up all over the land by the Enterprise Barrel Jack, Truck and Stand.

Lake from Mach. Hall.

Plowing and plodding at the World's Fair.

Delaware section, G. & S. building.

Machinery Hall, S. Avenue looking east.

Philadelphia University of Medicine and Surgery.

Statue of Stephen Girard, Girard College, Phila.

Broad St. from the Academy of Music.

Sailors from North Atlantic Squadron. G.A.R. Encampment Phila'da.

[Horticultural Hall and Academy of Music, South Broad Street, Philadelphia]

The army of Sir Knight Templars, Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.

Broad Street, showing M.E. church, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.

Ring, Grandpa, ring! Independence Hall, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.

Viti's alabaster vases M.B.

U.S. Govt. B'ld'g transept looking s[outh].

U.S. Chemical Dep't. Main Building.

Masonic Temple and M.E. Church, Phila.

Methodist Episcopal Church and Masonic Temple.

M.E. Church Broad and Arch Sts., Philada.

The City Hall Philadelphia. Architecture, sculpture and history.

Centennial circular. Norwalk Lock Company. South Norwalk, Conn.

Friends' Book Association, 706 Arch St., Phila. Stationery, engraving and printing.

[Chestnut Street, west from Seventh Street, north side, Philadelphia]

Chestnut Street - east from Continental Hotel.

Pages