Color print of a hay field at the foot of a large rocky hill. Men are raking hay into bundles. A horse-drawn hay wagon is on a road in the center of the field.
Black and white print depicting a grove of evergreen trees with wood frame buildings among them. Men on horseback, a horse-drawn carriage and a team of oxen pulling a wagon are in the foreground.
Color print depicting a ferry pier at which a steamboat labeled "West Point" is docked. A two and a half-story wood house is on the right. In the background across the river are various buildings of the military academy West Point.
Black and white print city on a river. The river separates a rural area in the foreground with a ferry waiting at the end of a road from the city on its opposite bank. There are numerous pencil comments and additions on the image.
Color print of a rural scene with a steam running through wooded hills. Houses and a church are located along the banks of the stream. A boy and girl are on a path in the foreground.
Black & white print; half length portrait of a woman (actress Miss E. Kimberly) seated with her right arm leaning on a table. Underneath the image is a facsimile of the sitter's autograph.
Color advertising print depicting four men and a boy in fashionable dress. In the background is the bridge over the Schuylkill River going to Fairmont Park, Philadelphia.
Color print depicting a young man in lower left asleep with his head propped against a lamppost. City buildings are in the background. Numerous advertising posters are pasted on a wall beside him. They are arranged so that they are humorous when read from top to bottom.
Color print of a horse (Ten Broeck) standing in a stall.
Description
A color print of a bay colored stallion with a black tail and legs stands in a stall which has a brick floor, plastered walls, and clean straw. The horse has powerful muscles and a sleek coat.
Ten Broeck was sired by Cosmo around 1855.
Established in Boston in 1872 by Charles Armstrong (born 1836 in London, came to US in 1866 and worked for Prang 1869-71 before going into partnership with John E. Green and Daniel McLellan in Boston). They called themselves "artistic lithographers" on their trade card and specialized in chromos for scientific works as well as sporting subjects. Their head artist was William Harring von Ammon, who signed his prints W. Harring. They closed in 1897.
Black and white print depicting various public buildings and churches of a small town set around a fenced park. A carriage pulled by a single horse is on a dirt road in the foreground.
Black and white print; stock certificate for sixteen shares in The Empire City Mining Co. issued to E. S. Waterman on November 25, 1874. A vignette of the interior of a factory with three men working with ore is located in the lower center of the print.
Black and white print with tint of the floor plan of the New York State Assembly giving the names of the assemblymen and their seat numbers. A small view in the lower left depicts the exterior of the State Capitol in the winter.
Color print of the hilly forested banks of the Hudson River with numerous watercraft on the water. A couple is in the foreground with a fort beneath them at the foot of the hill.
Color print of a horse pulling a sleigh containing four adults and two children. Two riders on horseback accompany them and three dogs run ahead of them.
Color print of a river with heavily wooded banks. A group of hikers and horseback riders are on a path in the foreground. Two steamboats and numerous sail boats are on the river. Buildings (West Point) are visible on a hill in the distance.