Showing 41 - 50 of 71 Records
Bird's Eye View, Jamaica, Vt.
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Image nop
- Date Created: 1911
- Description: See images bmlthayer T236, T244, T246, T254, T258 also.
- Parent Collections: Porter C. Thayer Photographs
Parsonage of Baptist Church, Jamaica, Vt.
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Image nop
- Date Created: 1911
- Description: See images bmlthayer T220, T261, T266, T284 also.
- Parent Collections: Porter C. Thayer Photographs
Bird's-Eye View, West Halifax, Vt.
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Image nop
- Date Created: 1911
- Description: Baptist church in foreground.
- Parent Collections: Porter C. Thayer Photographs
Dana Dutton's House on Dover Road, South Newfane, Vt.
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Image nop
- Date Created: 1910
- Description: Since burned down.
- Parent Collections: Porter C. Thayer Photographs
Bridge St., Green River, Vt.
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Image nop
- Date Created: 19--
- Parent Collections: Porter C. Thayer Photographs
Barn raising, Wilmington, Vt.
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Image nop
- Date Created: 19--
- Parent Collections: Porter C. Thayer Photographs
Thayer family barnyard with chickens, Newfane, Vt.
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Image nop
- Date Created: 19--
- Parent Collections: Porter C. Thayer Photographs
Unidentified house and barn
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Image nop
- Date Created: 19--
- Parent Collections: Porter C. Thayer Photographs
Family in front of their homestead, Westminster, Vt.
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Image nop
- Date Created: 19--
- Parent Collections: Porter C. Thayer Photographs
Tennie Toussaint Photographs
- Date Created: 2007-04-10
- Description: The Tennie Toussaint collection includes photographs of agricultural landscapes, logging, mills, barn raisings, and railroad bridges from the Danville, Vermont area, circa 1900. Tennie Toussaint was a columnist for the Burlington Free Press in the 1960s - 1970s. In addition, she was an artist, librarian, made maple syrup, and refinished antique chairs. The photographs were taken by Elgin Gates, a North Danville blacksmith. Other notable figures in this collection are Frank Valley, a carpenter responsible for a lot of the new barns built at this time and the remodeling of many local houses who was known for his meticulous craftmanship, and Arthur Sanborn, who owned the sawmill and whose home had modern touches such as electricity, an aluminum roof, and a stained glass window. The mill owned by Sanborn had previously been run by the McFarlands and produced one million board feet a year at its peak.