![Searching...](https://ohiopix.org/wp-content/plugins/contentdm-search/images/spinner.gif)
Foshay Tower Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p15005coll10/3927/full/,600/0/default.jpg)
Description: This photograph depicts Foshay Tower in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Youngstown pipe was used in this building.
On the photo is written:
"FOSHAY TOWER
MINNEAPOLIS MINN.
YOUNGSTOWN PIPE" View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AC2_YHCIL_MSS0140_B03F48_003
Subjects: Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company; Construction; Steel industry; Minneapolis (Minn.)--Buildings, structures, etc.
Places: Minneapolis (Minnesota); Hennepin County (Minnesota)
Image ID: AC2_YHCIL_MSS0140_B03F48_003
Subjects: Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company; Construction; Steel industry; Minneapolis (Minn.)--Buildings, structures, etc.
Places: Minneapolis (Minnesota); Hennepin County (Minnesota)
Jeffrey 6-Ton Locomotives Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p267401coll32/9710/full/600,600/0/default.jpg)
Description: Electric mine locomotives made by the Jeffrey Manufacturing Company of Columbus, Ohio in use at the Oliver Mining Company, Ely, Minnesota, 1936. They were powered by electricity from an overhead cable which was picked up by a trolley boom on the locomotive. The top speed of these locomotives was about 5 miles per hour. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL01571
Subjects: Coal miners; Ohio Economy--Economy--Business
Places: Ely (Minnesota)
Image ID: AL01571
Subjects: Coal miners; Ohio Economy--Economy--Business
Places: Ely (Minnesota)
1955 Malabar Farm calendar Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p267401coll32/20223/full/,600/0/default.jpg)
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)
Image ID: Page1
Subjects: Conservation education; Bromfield, Louis (1896-1956); Agriculture; Soil science; Malabar Farm
Places: Mansfield (Ohio); Richland County (Ohio)
Warren James Fort photograph Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p16007coll100/725/full/,600/0/default.jpg)
Description: This is a photograph of Warren James Fort of Winona, Minnesota, November 12, 1920. This image comes from a group of photographs of babies and young children named after President Warren G. Harding, which were sent to Harding while he was in office and eventually transferred to the Ohio Historical Society from the Harding Memorial Association.
Harding’s election provided a short burst of popularity for the name Warren, which had been steadily gaining in popularity during the 1910s. According to data from the Social Security Administration, the name rose from 122nd place in 1910 to 82nd place in 1919, with its largest jump in 1920 when it reached 39th. It jumped again in 1921, ranking 24th that year. After Harding's election in November of 1921, and his subsequent death on August 2, 1923, the name declined in popularity throughout the 20th century. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: P146_B45F01_008
Subjects: Harding, Warren G. (Warren Gamaliel), 1865-1923; Children; Portrait photography; Presidents--United States--1920-1930
Places: Winona (Minnesota)
Image ID: P146_B45F01_008
Subjects: Harding, Warren G. (Warren Gamaliel), 1865-1923; Children; Portrait photography; Presidents--United States--1920-1930
Places: Winona (Minnesota)
Harding Johnson photograph Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p16007coll100/754/full/,600/0/default.jpg)
Description: Photograph of a baby identified as Harding Johnson of St. Paul, Minnesota, aged three months on December 8, 1920. This image comes from a group of photographs of babies and young children named after President Warren G. Harding, which were sent to Harding while he was in office and eventually transferred to the Ohio Historical Society from the Harding Memorial Association.
Harding’s election provided a short burst of popularity for the name Warren, which had been steadily gaining in popularity during the 1910s. According to data from the Social Security Administration, the name rose from 122nd place in 1910 to 82nd place in 1919, with its largest jump in 1920 when it reached 39th. It jumped again in 1921, ranking 24th that year. After Harding's election in November of 1921, and his subsequent death on August 2, 1923, the name declined in popularity throughout the 20th century. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: P146_B45F01_009_001
Subjects: Harding, Warren G. (Warren Gamaliel), 1865-1923; Children; Portrait photography; Presidents--United States--1920-1930;
Places: St. Paul (Minnesota)
Image ID: P146_B45F01_009_001
Subjects: Harding, Warren G. (Warren Gamaliel), 1865-1923; Children; Portrait photography; Presidents--United States--1920-1930;
Places: St. Paul (Minnesota)
Tremper Mound otter effigy pipe photograph Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p267401coll32/28417/full/600,600/0/default.jpg)
Description: Photograph showing an otter effigy pipe recovered during the excavation of Tremper Mound, 1915.
Tremper Mound is located near the confluence of the Scioto River and Pond Creek in Rush Township, Scioto County, Ohio. The mound, originally surrounded by a low, sub-rectangular embankment, is large and irregularly shaped, and early on was thought by some observers to be in the form of an animal. William C. Mills excavated the mound in 1915 and discovered that it had actually been constructed over the remains of a large wooden post structure with several side chambers, giving the mound its unusual outline. In one of these chambers Mills recovered over 500 objects diagnostic of the Hopewell Culture (100 BC - AD 400), most of which had been “killed” or purposely broken.
This number included 136 smoking pipes of various styles carved from a soft stone known as pipestone. Some pipes portrayed zoomorphic (animal-like) forms that were created so exactingly that different species of the same animal can be discerned. They are considered true works of art. Many of these pipes have been restored and are presently on display at the Ohio History Center in Columbus. A similar cache of pipes was excavated from Mound 8 at Mound City in the mid-1800s but was later sold to the British Museum. Because Tremper Mound is just west of the main deposit of Ohio Pipestone, this was long thought to be the source material for the entire Tremper cache. However, recent non-destructive testing indicates that in addition to Ohio Pipestone, Catlinite from Minnesota and Sterling Pipestone from Illinois were also used.
View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV17_B04F04_E13_009
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Image ID: AV17_B04F04_E13_009
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Tremper Mound effigy pipes Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p267401coll32/28418/full/,600/0/default.jpg)
Description: Photograph showing effigy pipes recovered during the excavation of Tremper Mound, 1915.
Tremper Mound is located near the confluence of the Scioto River and Pond Creek in Rush Township, Scioto County, Ohio. The mound, originally surrounded by a low, sub-rectangular embankment, is large and irregularly shaped, and early on was thought by some observers to be in the form of an animal. William C. Mills excavated the mound in 1915 and discovered that it had actually been constructed over the remains of a large wooden post structure with several side chambers, giving the mound its unusual outline. In one of these chambers Mills recovered over 500 objects diagnostic of the Hopewell Culture (100 BC - AD 400), most of which had been “killed” or purposely broken.
This number included 136 smoking pipes of various styles carved from a soft stone known as pipestone. Some pipes portrayed zoomorphic (animal-like) forms that were created so exactingly that different species of the same animal can be discerned. They are considered true works of art. Many of these pipes have been restored and are presently on display at the Ohio History Center in Columbus. A similar cache of pipes was excavated from Mound 8 at Mound City in the mid-1800s but was later sold to the British Museum. Because Tremper Mound is just west of the main deposit of Ohio Pipestone, this was long thought to be the source material for the entire Tremper cache. However, recent non-destructive testing indicates that in addition to Ohio Pipestone, Catlinite from Minnesota and Sterling Pipestone from Illinois were also used.
View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV17_B04F04_E11_001
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Image ID: AV17_B04F04_E11_001
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Tremper Mound platform pipe photograph Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p267401coll32/28419/full/600,600/0/default.jpg)
Description: Photograph showing a platform pipe recovered during the excavation of Tremper Mound, 1915.
Tremper Mound is located near the confluence of the Scioto River and Pond Creek in Rush Township, Scioto County, Ohio. The mound, originally surrounded by a low, sub-rectangular embankment, is large and irregularly shaped, and early on was thought by some observers to be in the form of an animal. William C. Mills excavated the mound in 1915 and discovered that it had actually been constructed over the remains of a large wooden post structure with several side chambers, giving the mound its unusual outline. In one of these chambers Mills recovered over 500 objects diagnostic of the Hopewell Culture (100 BC - AD 400), most of which had been “killed” or purposely broken.
This number included 136 smoking pipes of various styles carved from a soft stone known as pipestone. Some pipes portrayed zoomorphic (animal-like) forms that were created so exactingly that different species of the same animal can be discerned. They are considered true works of art. Many of these pipes have been restored and are presently on display at the Ohio History Center in Columbus. A similar cache of pipes was excavated from Mound 8 at Mound City in the mid-1800s but was later sold to the British Museum. Because Tremper Mound is just west of the main deposit of Ohio Pipestone, this was long thought to be the source material for the entire Tremper cache. However, recent non-destructive testing indicates that in addition to Ohio Pipestone, Catlinite from Minnesota and Sterling Pipestone from Illinois were also used.
View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV17_B04F05_E01_005
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Image ID: AV17_B04F05_E01_005
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Tremper Mound hawk effigy pipe photograph Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p267401coll32/28420/full/600,600/0/default.jpg)
Description: Photograph showing a hawk effigy pipe recovered during the excavation of Tremper Mound, 1915.
Tremper Mound is located near the confluence of the Scioto River and Pond Creek in Rush Township, Scioto County, Ohio. The mound, originally surrounded by a low, sub-rectangular embankment, is large and irregularly shaped, and early on was thought by some observers to be in the form of an animal. William C. Mills excavated the mound in 1915 and discovered that it had actually been constructed over the remains of a large wooden post structure with several side chambers, giving the mound its unusual outline. In one of these chambers Mills recovered over 500 objects diagnostic of the Hopewell Culture (100 BC - AD 400), most of which had been “killed” or purposely broken.
This number included 136 smoking pipes of various styles carved from a soft stone known as pipestone. Some pipes portrayed zoomorphic (animal-like) forms that were created so exactingly that different species of the same animal can be discerned. They are considered true works of art. Many of these pipes have been restored and are presently on display at the Ohio History Center in Columbus. A similar cache of pipes was excavated from Mound 8 at Mound City in the mid-1800s but was later sold to the British Museum. Because Tremper Mound is just west of the main deposit of Ohio Pipestone, this was long thought to be the source material for the entire Tremper cache. However, recent non-destructive testing indicates that in addition to Ohio Pipestone, Catlinite from Minnesota and Sterling Pipestone from Illinois were also used.
View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV17_B04F05_E02_001
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Image ID: AV17_B04F05_E02_001
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Tremper Mound hawk effigy pipe photograph Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p267401coll32/28423/full/600,600/0/default.jpg)
Description: Photograph showing a hawk effigy pipe recovered during the excavation of Tremper Mound, 1915.
Tremper Mound is located near the confluence of the Scioto River and Pond Creek in Rush Township, Scioto County, Ohio. The mound, originally surrounded by a low, sub-rectangular embankment, is large and irregularly shaped, and early on was thought by some observers to be in the form of an animal. William C. Mills excavated the mound in 1915 and discovered that it had actually been constructed over the remains of a large wooden post structure with several side chambers, giving the mound its unusual outline. In one of these chambers Mills recovered over 500 objects diagnostic of the Hopewell Culture (100 BC - AD 400), most of which had been “killed” or purposely broken.
This number included 136 smoking pipes of various styles carved from a soft stone known as pipestone. Some pipes portrayed zoomorphic (animal-like) forms that were created so exactingly that different species of the same animal can be discerned. They are considered true works of art. Many of these pipes have been restored and are presently on display at the Ohio History Center in Columbus. A similar cache of pipes was excavated from Mound 8 at Mound City in the mid-1800s but was later sold to the British Museum. Because Tremper Mound is just west of the main deposit of Ohio Pipestone, this was long thought to be the source material for the entire Tremper cache. However, recent non-destructive testing indicates that in addition to Ohio Pipestone, Catlinite from Minnesota and Sterling Pipestone from Illinois were also used.
View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV17_B04F04_E14_009
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Image ID: AV17_B04F04_E14_009
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Tremper Mound platform pipe photograph Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p267401coll32/28424/full/600,600/0/default.jpg)
Description: Photograph showing a platform pipe recovered during the excavation of Tremper Mound, 1915.
Tremper Mound is located near the confluence of the Scioto River and Pond Creek in Rush Township, Scioto County, Ohio. The mound, originally surrounded by a low, sub-rectangular embankment, is large and irregularly shaped, and early on was thought by some observers to be in the form of an animal. William C. Mills excavated the mound in 1915 and discovered that it had actually been constructed over the remains of a large wooden post structure with several side chambers, giving the mound its unusual outline. In one of these chambers Mills recovered over 500 objects diagnostic of the Hopewell Culture (100 BC - AD 400), most of which had been “killed” or purposely broken.
This number included 136 smoking pipes of various styles carved from a soft stone known as pipestone. Some pipes portrayed zoomorphic (animal-like) forms that were created so exactingly that different species of the same animal can be discerned. They are considered true works of art. Many of these pipes have been restored and are presently on display at the Ohio History Center in Columbus. A similar cache of pipes was excavated from Mound 8 at Mound City in the mid-1800s but was later sold to the British Museum. Because Tremper Mound is just west of the main deposit of Ohio Pipestone, this was long thought to be the source material for the entire Tremper cache. However, recent non-destructive testing indicates that in addition to Ohio Pipestone, Catlinite from Minnesota and Sterling Pipestone from Illinois were also used.
View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV17_B04F04_E14_006
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Image ID: AV17_B04F04_E14_006
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Tremper Mound mink effigy pipe photograph Save
![](https://ohiomemory.org/digital/iiif/p267401coll32/28425/full/600,600/0/default.jpg)
Description: Photograph showing a mink effigy pipe recovered during the excavation of Tremper Mound, 1915.
Tremper Mound is located near the confluence of the Scioto River and Pond Creek in Rush Township, Scioto County, Ohio. The mound, originally surrounded by a low, sub-rectangular embankment, is large and irregularly shaped, and early on was thought by some observers to be in the form of an animal. William C. Mills excavated the mound in 1915 and discovered that it had actually been constructed over the remains of a large wooden post structure with several side chambers, giving the mound its unusual outline. In one of these chambers Mills recovered over 500 objects diagnostic of the Hopewell Culture (100 BC - AD 400), most of which had been “killed” or purposely broken.
This number included 136 smoking pipes of various styles carved from a soft stone known as pipestone. Some pipes portrayed zoomorphic (animal-like) forms that were created so exactingly that different species of the same animal can be discerned. They are considered true works of art. Many of these pipes have been restored and are presently on display at the Ohio History Center in Columbus. A similar cache of pipes was excavated from Mound 8 at Mound City in the mid-1800s but was later sold to the British Museum. Because Tremper Mound is just west of the main deposit of Ohio Pipestone, this was long thought to be the source material for the entire Tremper cache. However, recent non-destructive testing indicates that in addition to Ohio Pipestone, Catlinite from Minnesota and Sterling Pipestone from Illinois were also used.
View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV17_B04F05_E05_004
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)
Image ID: AV17_B04F05_E05_004
Subjects: Hopewell Culture (A.D. 1–400); Mounds -- Ohio -- Scioto County; Earthworks (Archaeology); Excavations (Archaeology)--Ohio; Artifacts
Places: Scioto County (Ohio)