1 - 25 of 365 results
You searched for: Subject: is exactly 'People'Date: 1890s
Item Title Type Subject Creator Publisher Date Place Address Description
12438Linus the Long-Haired Wonder Horse Advertising Card
  • Image, Photograph, Picture Postcard, Real Photo
  • Nature, Animals
  • People
  • I.L. Hammond and Co., Lewiston, Maine
  • 1892 c.
  • Lewiston ME
8604Meadows near Zaandam - Photo 61
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Structures, Factory, Sawmill Building
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1896
8613Beach at Katwyk - Photo 70
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Places, Shore
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1896
8614Dutch Girl, Katwyk - Photo 71
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1896
8616Coopers in Scheveningen - Photo 73
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1896
According to Sjaak Boone, Chairman of the Scheveningen Historical and Genealogical Society, this photograph depicts a group of coopers working at the wharf of the shipowner Arie van Vliet at the Badhuiskade. The name of the cooper standing at the 3d barrel from the left is Cornelis van der Toorn.
Description:
According to Sjaak Boone, Chairman of the Scheveningen Historical and Genealogical Society, this photograph depicts a group of coopers working at the wharf of the shipowner Arie van Vliet at the Badhuiskade. The name of the cooper standing at the 3d barrel from the left is Cornelis van der Toorn.
8631Mr. Hank's House
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1896
  • Boston MA area, Cambridge
8636Unknown Girl
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1897-02-21
8637Unknown Girl
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1897
8638Unknown Girl
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1897
8639Unknown Girl
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1897
8641Unknown Woman at Tea
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1897-04-25
8642Unknown Woman at Tea
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1897-04-25
8841Woman in Bonnet by Ocean
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1899
11243Cora Enola Mills and Jesse Newell Mills
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • Moore - Isaac Thomas Moore (1872-1963)
  • 1897 c.
  • Southwest Harbor
6122John Clement Clem Walls
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1898 c.
  • Tremont, Seal Cove
11734Fish Factory Workers in Southwest Harbor with Horse Mackerel and Halibut
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • Worth
  • 1891
  • Southwest Harbor
"The catch. probably tuna (called horse mackerel locally), has arrived at the packing house, having been dressed on board vessel. Now it is up to this hardy packing crew to wash these monstrous fish before packing them for shipment to Boston. Except for Asian markets, which existed mostly in large cities, there were few buyers for this product. At other times this packing house was filled with the more predominant fish of the day: hake, cod, haddock, and mackerel. Crews would wash the fish, lather them with salt, and pack them in ice in the tall barrels shown at rear for shipment to Gloucester or Boston. Only a few dealers in Manset, such as the Parkers, specialized in halibut, as it had to be shipped fresh on ice. Mackerel was the only product that had to be inspected once it arrived in Gloucester. As this list suggests, local fisheries processed a variety of fish. The local fishermen would head out, from spring through fall, following the schools, returning with whatever the sea would offer, and putting extra change in their pockets." – Text accompanying this photograph in “Mount Desert Island - Somesville, Southwest Harbor, and Northeast Harbor” by Earle G. Shettleworth Jr. and Lydia B. Vandenbergh - Images of America Series, 2001. p. 43.
Description:
"The catch. probably tuna (called horse mackerel locally), has arrived at the packing house, having been dressed on board vessel. Now it is up to this hardy packing crew to wash these monstrous fish before packing them for shipment to Boston. Except for Asian markets, which existed mostly in large cities, there were few buyers for this product. At other times this packing house was filled with the more predominant fish of the day: hake, cod, haddock, and mackerel. Crews would wash the fish, lather them with salt, and pack them in ice in the tall barrels shown at rear for shipment to Gloucester or Boston. Only a few dealers in Manset, such as the Parkers, specialized in halibut, as it had to be shipped fresh on ice. Mackerel was the only product that had to be inspected once it arrived in Gloucester. As this list suggests, local fisheries processed a variety of fish. The local fishermen would head out, from spring through fall, following the schools, returning with whatever the sea would offer, and putting extra change in their pockets." – Text accompanying this photograph in “Mount Desert Island - Somesville, Southwest Harbor, and Northeast Harbor” by Earle G. Shettleworth Jr. and Lydia B. Vandenbergh - Images of America Series, 2001. p. 43. [show more]
11736Horse Mackerel and Halibut Salted in Butts at Parker's Shed, Manset, Maine
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • Structures, Outbuildings, Shed
  • Worth
  • 1891
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
5050Capt. Howard P. Robbins and Child at Baker Island Light
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Structures, Transportation, Lighthouse
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1893-09-14
  • Cranberry Isles, Baker Island
Edgar H. Robbins is probably the child in the photograph
Description:
Edgar H. Robbins is probably the child in the photograph
5287Group on Greening Island
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1892-08-21
  • Southwest Harbor, Greening Island
7681Emily Robinson Farnsworth, Mrs. Alton E. Farnsworth, on a Donkey
  • Image, Photograph
  • Nature, Animals
  • People
  • 1890 c.
  • Southwest Harbor
8071Mabel Whitney Underwood at Pigeon Cove, Magnolia, Massachusetts
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • People
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1893-07-16
  • Gloucester MA, Magnolia
9819Charles Eliot at Brush Hill
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1895 c.
  • Milton MA
11560Hunting Jackrabbits on Flying Mountain
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1899-12
  • Acadia National Park, HCTPR
Left to Right: William Lloyd Carroll, Jones Watson Tracy, Frederick Richardson Tracy, Guy Robinson and Charles Henry Rea
Description:
Left to Right: William Lloyd Carroll, Jones Watson Tracy, Frederick Richardson Tracy, Guy Robinson and Charles Henry Rea
11938Proposal of Marriage from Arno Preston Stanley to Mabel Estelle Stanley, later Mrs. Arno Preston Stanley
  • Document, Correspondence, Letter
  • People
  • 1894
  • Cranberry Isles, Great Cranberry Island
In 1894 Arno Preston Stanley (1865-1937) wrote a letter to his fourth cousin, Mabelle Estelle Stanley (1868-1955), daughter of Robert S. Stanley and Phoebe Jane (Gilley) Stanley, [both descended from Sans Stanley (1702-) and Mary (Charder) Stanley (1706-1748)] and asked for her hand in marriage: "Dear Mabel I love you with all my heart and I am willing to part with all on earth for your presents if you will join with me now at the present time but after you read this, and don’t see fit to join with me I will say no more about it and give up and die in despair I shall feel as if I have not a friend on earth if you say no if you choose others ways I hope you will be happy Through life and when I die I hope to meet with you in heaven if god is willing for me to please write on this peper and give me ether way you choose This is the way I feel I trust in god that we may be happy through life if you ascept please answer yes or no and give me this piece of peper back Yours Truly Arno. P. Stanley Live or die I shall think of you as a friend and one that love you well and you may think as you please" Mabelle added a penciled note, “Yes Dear,” in the space provided in his letter. They filed their intention to marry on October 25, 1894 and were married on November 3, 1894 at Cranberry Isles. Mabelle died on March 24, 1955, at the age of 86, at the Bay View Nursing Home in South Portland, Maine. She had saved the hopeful, loving letter Arno had written to her 61 years before. Her family buried her near Arno in the Stanley Cemetery No. 3 (Map 6 – Lot 1), Great Cranberry Island, Maine. Arno would have been living at his father, Enoch Boynton Stanley's house at Great Cranberry Island when he wrote the letter. Mabel's name was spelled Mabelle on her gravestone and curators use that spelling, but have left Arno's Mabel as it appears in his letter. Arno and Mabel's grandson, Ralph Warren Stanley, surmises that she was known as Mabel and that her relatives put on airs when they changed it to Mabelle on her gravestone.
Description:
In 1894 Arno Preston Stanley (1865-1937) wrote a letter to his fourth cousin, Mabelle Estelle Stanley (1868-1955), daughter of Robert S. Stanley and Phoebe Jane (Gilley) Stanley, [both descended from Sans Stanley (1702-) and Mary (Charder) Stanley (1706-1748)] and asked for her hand in marriage: "Dear Mabel I love you with all my heart and I am willing to part with all on earth for your presents if you will join with me now at the present time but after you read this, and don’t see fit to join with me I will say no more about it and give up and die in despair I shall feel as if I have not a friend on earth if you say no if you choose others ways I hope you will be happy Through life and when I die I hope to meet with you in heaven if god is willing for me to please write on this peper and give me ether way you choose This is the way I feel I trust in god that we may be happy through life if you ascept please answer yes or no and give me this piece of peper back Yours Truly Arno. P. Stanley Live or die I shall think of you as a friend and one that love you well and you may think as you please" Mabelle added a penciled note, “Yes Dear,” in the space provided in his letter. They filed their intention to marry on October 25, 1894 and were married on November 3, 1894 at Cranberry Isles. Mabelle died on March 24, 1955, at the age of 86, at the Bay View Nursing Home in South Portland, Maine. She had saved the hopeful, loving letter Arno had written to her 61 years before. Her family buried her near Arno in the Stanley Cemetery No. 3 (Map 6 – Lot 1), Great Cranberry Island, Maine. Arno would have been living at his father, Enoch Boynton Stanley's house at Great Cranberry Island when he wrote the letter. Mabel's name was spelled Mabelle on her gravestone and curators use that spelling, but have left Arno's Mabel as it appears in his letter. Arno and Mabel's grandson, Ralph Warren Stanley, surmises that she was known as Mabel and that her relatives put on airs when they changed it to Mabelle on her gravestone. [show more]
12117Joseph B. Mason
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Crayon Portrait
  • People
  • 1893 c.