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Matches 1,226 to 1,250 of 11,140 » See Gallery » Slide Show
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1226 |
| Clyde Garland Whittington
http://family.mattsdomain.com/
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1227 |
| Coeds Lizzie is second from left. |
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1228 |
| Coeds.jpg |
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1229 |
| Colin Spencer Ward (1964-1995)
Find-A-Grave:
"North Adams State College, North Adams, MA, Class of 1987"
"I met Colin in September of 1982 when [he] and I were freshman at *North Adams State College. [He] and I lived in the same dormitory. It wasn't until our sophomore year that him and I got to be friends.
Colin had a really good sense of humor. He made people laugh. He was in the air force reserves. Upon graduation Colin was really looking forward to moving to Texas. I ended up transferring to another school after sophomore year. Besides seeing Colin during a visit to North Adams State, he and I pretty much lost touch with each other. It wasn't until ten years after I last saw him that I learned he had been killed in an accident in Texas while driving his jeep.
Colin was thirty at the time of his death. It's been over thirty years since I met him. Being that [he] and I were both freshman, we stuck together with a couple other first year students in the dormitory. I have good memories of hanging out with Colin.
*The school is now Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. He was a sociology major at the school, class of 1987." |
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1230 |
| Colorado Springs, CO U.S. Air Force Academy, Chapel sunset (1962) |
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1231 |
| Colorado Springs, CO: U.S. Air Force Academy, Chapel (1962)
While living in Pueblo, CO, the Thomas family often visited the Air Force Academy. Roy pointed out to the four children the financial advantages of attending a service academy. Robert entered the ROTC program at James Madison University and retired from the U.S. Army after twenty years. Susan did the next best thing and married a ROTC student, who ultimately retired from the U.S. Army. |
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1232 |
| Community Center, Cedar Creek Valley, Zepp, VA
Received from Russell Thomas. |
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1233 |
| Conestoga wagon
The Moore family in 1824 likely traveled west from Philadelphia in this type of wagon. |
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1234 |
| CONNELLY Robert Wainwright (b. 1845) drug store Statesville, Iredell, NC (1909).jpg |
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1235 |
| CONNELLY Robert Wainwright (b. 1845) old mill Iredell, NC (1906).jpg |
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1236 |
| CONNELLY Robert Wainwright (b. 1845) Stateville, Iredell, NC (1909).jpg |
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1237 |
| Conner Walker & Margaret Ann Deal Dec 1973 |
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1238 |
| Conner Walker Aug 1967 |
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1239 |
| Conner Walker Dec 1973 |
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1240 |
| At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld. |
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1241 |
| At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld. |
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1242 |
| Connie Jo Heflin face.png |
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1243 |
| Connie Jo Heflin.jpg |
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1244 |
| Cora Belle Burnett (1911-1999)
http://family.mattsdomain.com/
Photo taken Abt. 1930. |
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1245 |
| Cora Kennedy face |
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1246 |
| Coral Wayne Inskeep |
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1247 |
| Coral Wayne Inskeep .jpg |
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1248 |
| Cornish Engines & Discovery Center EPAL is East Poole and Agar Limited |
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1249 |
| Court House of Morgan County, Illinois, U.S.A., built 1869
"White & Borgognoni Architects, P.C., June 8, 2009:
The following historical information was obtained from the National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination Form, prepared in April 1986. The Morgan County Courthouse is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
Three successive courthouse buildings have served Morgan County. The third, and present, courthouse building was completed in November 1869. The building is a three-story, detached, limestone masonry block example of an eclectic blend of the towered Italianate Villa with the French Second Empire style. The unmatched towers at three corners of the building give emphasis to the vertical, architectural design. The architect for the building, Gurdon P. Randall, of Chicago, designed courthouses, schools, and churches in the Midwest. The Morgan County Courthouse is an excellent example of his work. When completed, the building cost $204,000.00 to construct.
Exterior Design and Modifications
The exterior walls of the present courthouse were constructed of limestone, quarried at Joliet, Illinois and shipped to Jacksonville by rail. Smooth sawn blocks were used for the wall surfaces. Rusticated blocks of stone were used at the base of the building and to create quoins at the corners of the building, and give a solid permanence to the structure. Extruded belt coursings, corner piers, paneled friezes, and scroll-shaped stone cornice brackets were used to emphasize the monumental character of the building’s design. Stone hoods cap the round-top windows. The roofs of the main building are straight-line mansards. The towers at the southwest, southeast, and northeast corners of the building have straight-line mansard roofs. The northeast tower is the flue for the building’s heating plant. The mansard roof of the main building is interrupted by a low gable roof facing east and west. A flat section of roofing is located behind
the upper edge of the main mansard roofs. Arched-top dormers, constructed of wood, break out of the mansard roofs of the southwest and southeast towers. Originally, bulls-eye windows were located in the east tower and front mansards." |
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1250 |
| Court House, Waseca,Waseca, MN, early 1900s
FamilyPhotos.com |
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