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.
Daughters of John Dodge Lurvey and Hannah (Carroll) Lurvey Margaret C. Lurvey (1851-1931) - Mrs. Daniel Wilbert Walls and then Mrs. Henry E. Trundy Lorinda Gilley Lurvey (1854-1942) - Mrs. Theodore P. Farmer Elizabeth Lawler Lurvey (1856-1951) - Mrs. Walter Bloomfield Stanley Elmira S. Lurvey (1858-1906) - Mrs. John Andrew Walls Mabel "May" Anna Lurvey (1862-1915) - Mrs. John R. Tinker
Description: Daughters of John Dodge Lurvey and Hannah (Carroll) Lurvey Margaret C. Lurvey (1851-1931) - Mrs. Daniel Wilbert Walls and then Mrs. Henry E. Trundy Lorinda Gilley Lurvey (1854-1942) - Mrs. Theodore P. Farmer Elizabeth Lawler Lurvey (1856-1951) - Mrs. Walter Bloomfield Stanley Elmira S. Lurvey (1858-1906) - Mrs. John Andrew Walls Mabel "May" Anna Lurvey (1862-1915) - Mrs. John R. Tinker
"The parents of our sailor boy, Fred Mayo, continue to hear good reports from him as to health and progress in Uncle Sam’s service. He has been assigned to a tank ship at Philadelphia and is still a valued member of the band. He was offered the position of leader, but declined, contenting himself with second place." – Bar Harbor Record, November 16, 1898, p. 4.
Description: "The parents of our sailor boy, Fred Mayo, continue to hear good reports from him as to health and progress in Uncle Sam’s service. He has been assigned to a tank ship at Philadelphia and is still a valued member of the band. He was offered the position of leader, but declined, contenting himself with second place." – Bar Harbor Record, November 16, 1898, p. 4.