John Bard's house Annandale had a framed picture window in the living room. When visiting the Bards with her father, Margaret Clark Sumner later recalled her first sight of this feature: "But what especially caught my eye was the view of the...
This is a framed photograph of five of the 1896 St. Stephen's graduates. As noted on the back of the frame, the photographs were printed by Reverend Albert Larrieu Longley and later framed and mounted by A. Rose on June 14th, 1916. The names of the...
The fifteen students of the 1873 St. Stephen's College graduating class are individually photographed. Their portraits are organized within a posterboard grid. Handwritten letters at the top read "Class of," over a large, red, stenciled "1873"...
The Chester Academy was built in 1846, at a cost of $10,000. It was a frame building 50 by 75 feet standing at the corner of Academy Avenue and the Goshen Road, now, 2006, called Brookside Ave. (Route 17M). THis photograph was taken before the 25...
Engineering drawing showing the proposed Passenger Station, the rearrangement of tracks and elimination of grade crossing at Meadow Ave. in downtown Chester, N.Y.
Map showing proposed underpass for the Meadow Avenue crossing, relocation of the 1841 Erie Station and construction of the new arts & crafts style Station.
Stores & shops; General stores; Photographic prints
J.H. Steitz's store, Harlemville. Store is in a frame building with covered porch, a shed is on the right side of the picture. Louise Steitz is standing on porch at left. 2 men are sitting on porch, man at left is Henry Steitz, the other man is...
1 photograph printed onto a matt frame. It is of a fenced in electic structure (Rhinebeck Sub-Station). There are two or three seperate wooden building/barns behind the structure and a ragtop car.
Crewel work depiction of a parrot-type bird on a branch with leaves and clumps of berries; on a beige (linen?) background. Mounted in a wood frame under glass or plexi. Sampler currently being researched.
A business card for De Louie Tice, a store in Ellenville on Canal Street. Their main selling point is their gold watch cases. Archival notes written in pencil on upper left and right corners of the front.