6 Matching Results

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Pennsyvania (PRR) 5011

A photograph print showing the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) 5011, 4-4-2, Altoona, PA.
Date: May 1937
Creator: Graves, Ralph L.
Object Type: Photograph
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

Tionesta Valley (TVRR) 9

A photograph print showing the Tionesta Valley (TVRR) 9, 2-6-0 (Brooks), with caboose, Hallton, PA.
Date: October 1937
Creator: Schick, Joseph
Object Type: Photograph
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
[Client Card: Bryn Athyn Supply Company] (open access)

[Client Card: Bryn Athyn Supply Company]

Client card describing work completed at the Roman Bronze Works Foundry for the Bryn Athyn Supply Company, including a job number, brief description, monetary amount, and dates associated with each entry. Pieces included: bronze cast reclining lamb and finial (7').
Date: 1937-11-11/1938-12-20
Creator: Roman Bronze Works Foundry
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Photograph 2012.201.B0294B.0317]

Photograph used for a story in the Daily Oklahoman newspaper. Caption: "A friendship which began 44 years ago in Danville, Ill., will be climaxed at 2 p.m. Wednesday when Miss Ethel Covey, long a state employee, and Clark W. Hollister, Beaver Falls, Pa., steel mill metallurgist, are married at Miss Covey's home, 3429 South Robinson avenue."
Date: August 24, 1937
Creator: Shroder, William J., Jr.
Object Type: Photograph
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

Pennsylvania

Map of Pennsylvania at the time of the ratification of the Constitution, showing towns, villages, roads, paths, counties, boundary lines, mountain ranges, and water bodies. The map also includes a legend (indicating meeting houses, wigwams, mills, forges, boundaries, towns, roads, villages, and paths) in the lower-right corner. Relief shown pictorially. Scale [ca. 1:950,400] (15 miles to the inch).
Date: 1937
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Map
System: The Portal to Texas History
Wildlife Conservation Through Erosion Control in the Piedmont (open access)

Wildlife Conservation Through Erosion Control in the Piedmont

"Erosion has left scars on a majority of farms in the Southeast. Too poor to produce crops, the eroding spots are usually abandoned. Unless they are treated to stop further washing of the soil they grow steadily larger and continually rob the farmer of more of his land. Fortunately, soil conservation and wildlife management can be effectively combined, and otherwise worthless areas made to produce a crop of game, fur bearers, and other desirable types of wildlife. The general principles of wildlife management on the farm are described in Farmers' Bulletins 1719 and 1759. The purpose of this bulletin is to show how gullies, terrace outlets, waterways, eroding field borders, pastures, and woodlands in the Piedmont region may be protected against erosion through the use of vegetation that will also provide food and cover for wildlife." -- p. ii
Date: 1937
Creator: Stevens, Ross O.
Object Type: Pamphlet
System: The UNT Digital Library