Searching...
    12 matches on "Nevada (Ohio)"
    Group portrait of cousins
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Group portrait of cousins  Save
    Description: The photograph, titled "Cousins at Nevada," shows two young women and two young men posing for a photograph. The group looks as though they were unprepared for the picture to be taken. Photograph by Harry Evan Kinley (1882-1969), a native of Upper Sandusky, Ohio. Kinley was active in local events and organizations, and spent his professional career as a clerk at his father's store, and later as a traveling salesman for the Marion Paper & Supply Company (1934-1962). Kinley was also an avid lifelong photographer, and the bulk of the Harry Kinley Collection is comprised of glass plate negatives documenting the Kinley family, the city of Upper Sandusky and Wyandot County and surrounding areas. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AV30_B01F01_34
    Subjects: Families--Ohio; Daily Life; Group portraits
    Places: Nevada (Ohio); Wyandot County (Ohio);
     
    Penstocks
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Penstocks  Save
    Description: Construction of Truckee Carson LaHontan Dam Churchill County Nevada. This project is now known as the Newlands Project. The construction occurred between 1911 and 1915. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AC2_YHCIL_MSS0031_B12F127_024
    Subjects: Penstocks; William B. Pollock Company; Steel Industry; Tubing; Dam construction
    Places: Youngstown (Ohio); Mahoning County (Ohio); Churchill County (Nevada)
     
    Models of maps
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Models of maps  Save
    Description: This photograph is of models of maps of a portion of the United States. They were made for the Ohio State School for the Blind as teaching tools. The map on the left is Washington, Oregon and California. The map on the right is Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B11F02_072_001
    Subjects: Models; Maps; Schools--Ohio; Ohio State School for the Blind; Blind--Education--Ohio--Columbus; Ohio--History--Pictorial works; Federal Writers' Project
    Places: Columbus (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio)
     
    Company F, 148th O.V.I Battle flag
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Company F, 148th O.V.I Battle flag  Save
    Description: The hand-sewn wool flag was carried by Company F, 148th Ohio Volunteer Infantry of Washington County (Ohio). The 36 stars are arranged symmetrically in canton pattern of six rows by six rows. Nevada added the 36th star in 1864 (October 31). Comprised of the 96th Battalion of Vinton County and the 46th of Washington County, the 148th mustered out of Marietta on May 18, 1864 under Colonel Thomas W. Moore. On May 23 the Regiment was involved in an accident on the Union Railroad leaving three soldiers seriously wounded. The 148th Ohio Volunteer Infantry mustered out September 14, 1864. By the war's end they had lost 2 officers and 37 enlisted men from disease. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: H18372_001
    Subjects: Ceremonial artifact; Communication artifact; Textile--wool; Civil War, 1861-1865; 148th OVI, Company F; Union Railroad; National Guard--Ohio Volunteer Infantry;
    Places: Marietta (Ohio); Washington County (Ohio)
     
    Envelope from Pounsford Stationery Company
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Envelope from Pounsford Stationery Company  Save
    Description: Original type reads: "The Pounsford Stationery Company traces its ancestry back to the first stationery store in Cincinnati, which was founded by George Conklin in the year of 1829. The firm name was changed to Applegate & Company in 1841, to Applegate & Pounsford in 1860 and to A.H. Pounsford & Company in 1888. Later it was incorporated under the name of The Pounsford Stationery Company. Here is a facsimile of an envelope that contained an order from Carson City, Nevada, which came by Pony Express to St. Louis and by boat from St. Louis to Cincinnati in 1842. Note the pen cancellation of both the U.S. stamp and the Langton's Express stamp." View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B03F11_010_1
    Subjects: Envelopes (Stationery); Stationery trade--Ohio; Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
    Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
     
    Lonely Nevada highway
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Lonely Nevada highway  Save
    Description: Photograph of a car driving down a deserted highway with a bird flying in the foreground, taken by Joe Munroe in Nevada, 1974. Munroe's career began in 1939 at the Cranbrook Academy of Art. He served in the Air Force during World War II and then joined Cincinnati-based Farm Quarterly magazine. Though raised in Detroit, agriculture became an important subject of Joe's photographs. He moved to California in 1955 and free-lanced, taking magazine assignments and selling his own work. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: P400_B34_F2421_JPG242
    Subjects: Joe Munroe; Landscape photography; Freelance photography
    Places: Nevada
     
    Research experiments with primate
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Research experiments with primate  Save
    Description: Joe Munroe photograph of a monkey being used in a science experiment at the University of Nevada, ca. 1970. Animal testing has come under scrutiny of late, but in the mid-20th century it was seen as acceptable. Joe Munroe's career began in 1939 at the Cranbrook Academy of Art. He served in the Air Force during World War II and then joined Cincinnati-based Farm Quarterly magazine. Though raised in Detroit, agriculture became an important subject of Joe's photographs. He moved to California in 1955 and free-lanced, taking magazine assignments and selling his own work. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: P400_B33_F2384_JPG206
    Subjects: Joe Munroe; Science--Experiments; Animal testing; Monkeys
    Places: Reno (Nevada)
     
    Alexander Winton driving automobile
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Alexander Winton driving automobile  Save
    Description: Reproduction of a photograph depicting inventor Alexander Winton driving a Winton automobile, manufactured in Cleveland, Ohio. The picture is possibly of a failed attempt made by Winton made in May 1901 to drive cross country. Beginning in San Francisco he crossed the Sierra Nevada mountains, but stopped in Nevada due to the difficult desert terrain. Alexander Winton was born in Grangemouth, Scotland, on June 20, 1860 and died on June 21, 1932. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL02668
    Subjects: Cuyahoga County (Ohio); Ohio Economy--Science and Technology; Automobiles
     
    1955 Malabar Farm calendar
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    1955 Malabar Farm calendar  Save
    Description: 1955 calendar advertising and themed around Ohio author and conservation advocate Louis Bromfield's famed Malabar Farm in Lucas, Ohio. The full-color twelve-month calendar includes color photographs by Joe Munroe and short caption essays by Louis Bromfield. Calendar verso pages feature longer essays on the history and rehabilitation of Malabar and vignettes of farm life also written by Bromfield. The Friends of the Land Collection (1930-1960) contains the papers of the Friends of the Land (1940-1959), a prominent national soil conservation education organization headquartered in Columbus, Ohio. FOTL produced an international literary arts quarterly, THE LAND (edited by New Deal agriculture writer Russell Lord) in addition to several members' only publications (LAND LETTER) and informational pamphlets. They also hosted annual conferences; ran conservation tours, teacher training labs, and workshops; and operated as a national clearinghouse for conservation information. Ohio farmer and novelist Louis Bromfield was active in the organization. Much of the collection reflects the career and interests of FOTL Executive Secretary Ollie Fink, who was a prominent conservation education pioneer in Ohio. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: Page1
    Subjects: Conservation education; Bromfield, Louis (1896-1956); Agriculture; Soil science; Malabar Farm
    Places: Mansfield (Ohio); Richland County (Ohio)
     
    USO performance photograph
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    USO performance photograph  Save
    Description: Taken in 1971 by U.S. Army medic Charles Tweel, this photograph shows women performing at Camp Evans as part of a United Service Organization (USO) show for the 101st Airborne Division during the Vietnam War. This performance was part of the 1971 Miss America USO Show, which featured that year's Miss America, Phyllis George, and some of the state winners. Pictured here, left to right, are Vicky Jo Todd (Miss Nevada), Bellinda Myrick (Miss Texas), Cheryl Brown (Miss Iowa), Hela Yungst (Miss New Jersey), Phyllis George (Miss America, shaking hands with women in blue), Karen Shields (Miss Arizona), and Donna Connelly (Miss Arkansas). The USO is an American non-profit organization dedicated to providing services to troops abroad and those returning home, including hosting concerts and performances at military bases overseas. This photograph is part of the Charles Tweel Collection (AV 324) at the Ohio History Connection. Charles Tweel grew up in Columbus, Ohio, and attended The Ohio State University. After graduation in 1968, he enlisted in the U.S. Army as a non-combatant, first training as a medic at Fort Sam Huston, followed by nine months of additional training at Valley Forge General Hospital in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania. He finished his training as a Specialist 3 and 91C, MOS, and went on to serve in Bamberg, Germany, with combat engineers for one year. In January 1971, Tweel served in Vietnam with the Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Battalion (Air Mobile), 506th Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division, based out of Camp Evans near Phu Bai, north of Hue, until December of that year. Tweel spent most of his service on various firebases as the medic in charge, and occasionally shared firebases with South Vietnamese soldiers. He also visited MedCAP stations (Medical Civic Action Programs) where he treated civilians. Tweel received the Bronze Star Medal for meritorious achievement, and was promoted to Specialist 5 in 1971. After discharge from the Army, he went to medical school and was in private practice as a family practitioner from 1979-2016, and now works part-time in inner city medical clinics in Columbus, Ohio, and Charleston, South Carolina. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AV324_B01F01_003
    Subjects: Vietnam War (1961-1975); United States. Army. Airborne Division, 101st; Entertainment; Military life
    Places: Camp Evans (Vietnam)
     
    USO performance photograph
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    USO performance photograph  Save
    Description: Taken in 1971 by U.S. Army medic Charles Tweel, this photograph shows women performing at Camp Evans as part of a United Service Organization (USO) show for the 101st Airborne Division during the Vietnam War. This performance was part of the 1971 Miss America USO Show, which featured that year's Miss America, Phyllis George, and some of the state winners. Pictured here, left to right, are Hela Yungst (Miss New Jersey), Vicky Jo Todd (Miss Nevada), Karen Shields (Miss Arizona), Phyllis George (Miss America), Bellinda Myrick (Miss Texas), Donna Connelly (Miss Arkansas), and Cheryl Brown (Miss Iowa). The USO is an American non-profit organization dedicated to providing services to troops abroad and those returning home, including hosting concerts and performances at military bases overseas. This photograph is part of the Charles Tweel Collection (AV 324) at the Ohio History Connection. Charles Tweel grew up in Columbus, Ohio, and attended The Ohio State University. After graduation in 1968, he enlisted in the U.S. Army as a non-combatant, first training as a medic at Fort Sam Huston, followed by nine months of additional training at Valley Forge General Hospital in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania. He finished his training as a Specialist 3 and 91C, MOS, and went on to serve in Bamberg, Germany, with combat engineers for one year. In January 1971, Tweel served in Vietnam with the Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Battalion (Air Mobile), 506th Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division, based out of Camp Evans near Phu Bai, north of Hue, until December of that year. Tweel spent most of his service on various firebases as the medic in charge, and occasionally shared firebases with South Vietnamese soldiers. He also visited MedCAP stations (Medical Civic Action Programs) where he treated civilians. Tweel received the Bronze Star Medal for meritorious achievement, and was promoted to Specialist 5 in 1971. After discharge from the Army, he went to medical school and was in private practice as a family practitioner from 1979-2016, and now works part-time in inner city medical clinics in Columbus, Ohio, and Charleston, South Carolina. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AV324_B01F01_007
    Subjects: Vietnam War (1961-1975); United States. Army. Airborne Division, 101st; Entertainment; Military life
    Places: Camp Evans (Vietnam)
     
    USO performance photograph
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    USO performance photograph  Save
    Description: Taken in 1971 by U.S. Army medic Charles Tweel, this photograph shows women performing at Camp Evans as part of a United Service Organization (USO) show for the 101st Airborne Division during the Vietnam War. This performance was part of the 1971 Miss America USO Show, which featured that year's Miss America, Phyllis George, and some of the state winners. Pictured here, left to right, are Hela Yungst (Miss New Jersey), Vicky Jo Todd (Miss Nevada), Karen Shields (Miss Arizona), Phyllis George (Miss America), Donna Connelly (Miss Arkansas), Bellinda Myrick (Miss Texas), and Cheryl Brown (Miss Iowa). The USO is an American non-profit organization dedicated to providing services to troops abroad and those returning home, including hosting concerts and performances at military bases overseas This photograph is part of the Charles Tweel Collection (AV 324) at the Ohio History Connection. Charles Tweel grew up in Columbus, Ohio, and attended The Ohio State University. After graduation in 1968, he enlisted in the U.S. Army as a non-combatant, first training as a medic at Fort Sam Huston, followed by nine months of additional training at Valley Forge General Hospital in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania. He finished his training as a Specialist 3 and 91C, MOS, and went on to serve in Bamberg, Germany, with combat engineers for one year. In January 1971, Tweel served in Vietnam with the Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Battalion (Air Mobile), 506th Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division, based out of Camp Evans near Phu Bai, north of Hue, until December of that year. Tweel spent most of his service on various firebases as the medic in charge, and occasionally shared firebases with South Vietnamese soldiers. He also visited MedCAP stations (Medical Civic Action Programs) where he treated civilians. Tweel received the Bronze Star Medal for meritorious achievement, and was promoted to Specialist 5 in 1971. After discharge from the Army, he went to medical school and was in private practice as a family practitioner from 1979-2016, and now works part-time in inner city medical clinics in Columbus, Ohio, and Charleston, South Carolina. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AV324_B01F01_012
    Subjects: Vietnam War (1961-1975); United States. Army. Airborne Division, 101st; Entertainment; Military life
    Places: Camp Evans (Vietnam)
     
      12 matches on "Nevada (Ohio)"
      Skip to content
      OhioPix
      FAQ    Advanced Search
      Menu
      Menu
      • Home
      • Advanced Search
      • Frequently Asked Questions
      • OhioPix Use
      • Record Display
      • sitemap

      Topics

      • Agriculture
      • American Indians in Ohio
      • Architecture
      • Arts and Entertainment
      • Business and Labor
      item in cart
      Check out now
      Ohio History Connection
      FAQ
      Advanced Search
      Subject heading sitemap
      For questions regarding image orders, contact [email protected] or call 614.297.2530.
      1. Choose a product option

      Thank you for visiting OhioPix. Please note that orders for high-resolution files will be filled within 5-10 business days of placing your order. Thank you for your patience and understanding.
      If you are purchasing this image for exhibit or other non-profit
      use by an Ohio cultural heritage institution, please contact
      [email protected] before proceeding with your order.
      2. Read and Agree

      Ohio History Connection Use Agreement and Conditions of Reproduction

      1. One-Time Use. The right to reproduce materials held in the collections of the Ohio History Connection is granted on a one-time basis only, and only for private study, scholarship or research. Any further reproduction of this material is prohibited without the express written permission of the Ohio History Connection.
      2. Use Agreement. Materials are reproduced for research use only and may not be used for publication, exhibition, or any other public purpose without the express written permission of the Ohio History Connection.
      3. Credit. Any publication, exhibition, or other public use of material owned by the Ohio History Connection must credit the Ohio History Connection. The credit line should read “Courtesy of the Ohio History Connection” and should include the image or call number. The Ohio History Connection appreciates receiving a copy or tearsheet of any publication/presentation containing material from the organization’s collections.
      4. Indemnification. In requesting permission to reproduce materials from the collections of the Ohio History Connection as described, the requestor agrees to hold harmless the OHC and its Trustees, Officers, employees and agents either jointly or severally from any action involving infringement of the rights of any person or their heirs and descendants in common law or under statutory copyright.
      5. Reproduction of Copyrighted Material. Permission to reproduce materials in which reproduction rights are reserved must be granted by signed written permission of the persons holding those rights.
      6. Copyright. The Ohio History Connection provides permission to use materials based on the organization’s ownership of the collection. Consideration of the requirements of copyrights is the responsibility of the author, producer, and publisher. Applicants assume all responsibility for questions of copyright and invasion of privacy that may arise in copying and using the materials available through Ohio Memory.
        Warning concerning copyright restriction: The copyright law of the U. S. (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to a photocopy or reproduction. One of the specified conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be “used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship or research.” If a user make a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction for purposes in excess of “fair use,” that user may be liable for copyright infringement. This institution reserves the right to refuse to accept a copying order if, in its judgment, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of copyright law.
      7. Photographs of Objects. The Ohio History Connection retains rights to photographs taken of artifacts owned by the Ohio History Connection. The images may be used for research, but any publication or public display is subject to the above conditions of reproduction. A new use agreement and appropriate fees must be submitted for each use

      Quality Disclaimer: To maintain the authenticity and preservation of historic artifacts, the Ohio History Connection will not alter or endanger items in the collection for the purposes of reproduction or digitization. By completing this order form, the signee acknowledges that any and all requests will be completed with conservation in mind and that the images produced will reflect the physical condition of the item which may exhibit dirt, scratches, stains, tears, fading, etc.

      Thank you for visiting OhioPix. Please note that orders for high-resolution files will be filled within 5-10 business days of placing your order.
      By clicking I Agree, I consent to the terms, and acknowledge that I am entering into a legally binding agreement.

       
      OhioPix
      Please note that only 10 images can be processed per order. If you would like to order more than 10, please contact [email protected].