[Client Card: Mr. Lincoln Borglum] (open access)

[Client Card: Mr. Lincoln Borglum]

Client card describing work completed at the Roman Bronze Works Foundry for Mr. Lincoln Borglum, including a job number, brief description, monetary amount, and dates associated with each entry. Pieces included: "Group of Three Small Figures", "Portrait Bust of Norbeck", "Portrait Bust of Gutzon Borglum" (4 copies; 2 bronze casts, 2 plaster casts; 28" x 16" x 26.5" x 17"), "Cowboy on Horse" (25.5" x 21"), "Woman Holding Gorilla", "Apache Pursued", and "Small General".
Date: 1964-08/1979-06
Creator: Roman Bronze Works Foundry
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Scrapbook Page: International Bridge, Brownsville, Texas]

Photographs of the Brownsville and Matamoros International Bridge, which crosses the Rio Bravo between the United States and Mexico. The top photos are of the bridge as seen from a distance, with the left picture showing a side view and the right a view from the road before the bridge. The bottom photos are of military men standing on and near the bridge beside a wooden building.
Date: 1916/1917
Creator: Cook, Frank Lauderdale
Object Type: Photograph
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Scrapbook Page: Brownsville, Texas]

Photographs of Brownsville, Texas. The top left photo is of the Brownsville Courthouse building with a man standing next to a fountain on the front sidewalk. The top right photo is of two men riding in a wagon pulled by a mule. The bottom left photo is of a train on tracks headed for Brownsville, with men standing around it. The bottom right photo is of a streetcar in front of city buildings in Brownsville, Texas.
Date: 1916/1917
Creator: Cook, Frank Lauderdale
Object Type: Photograph
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Photograph of Charro Days in Brownsville, Texas]

Photograph of people crowding the streets and sidewalks of Brownsville, Texas for Charro Days, an annual celebration.
Date: 1951~
Creator: Fisher, Larry Jene
Object Type: Photograph
System: The Portal to Texas History