Fifteen of the older guests of the Ward Manor girls' camps aboard the back of a truck for a ride through the fields. One of the farm workers helps a young woman onto the flatbed.
Little girls frolick in the fields around White House, one of the four camps for girls on Ward Manor. Girls ages 7 to 9 stayed at White House, which lay near Grey Barns, another girls' camp, on the property.
Shown here as the girls dormitory known as "The Homestead", this house was later purchased and renovated by Saul Bellow. The house was subsequently purchased by Bard College for faculty housing (during which time it was known as "Bellows' House"),...
Jenny Wren Club picnic photograph. (Beginning about 1907, local Jenny Wren Clubs were sponsored by the Delineator Magazine, a turn-of-the twentieth century ladies' fashions publication affiliated with the Butterick Company, to promote their sewing...
In 1919, the girls' basketball team had their picture taken by G. F. Foley of 5th Avenue, New York City. Was it a championship team? The nine girls are wearing uniform dresses with middy collars. 1919 is stitched on the fronts of the bodices and is...
The Elks Stepping Group marched in the Nyack Centennial Parade. Second from right is Ms. Harris, a leader of the girls' group. The young girl in the center was Lawanda.