Senator and Mrs. Stephen M. Young at home, interviewed by TV and news reporters the evening following November 4, 1964 reelection victory over Robert Taft, Jr.
Digital photograph of printed linen dress.
Lua Carey Cooper wore this dress in Xenia, Ohio when she was about four or five years old, just after the Civil War. Her father, Hugh Carey, worked as a real estate agent and notary public on bustling Detroit Street, where Lua and her family could have shopped for millinery and dress goods. As a young woman, she helped organize her local chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1894, and thereafter served as secretary.
Black and white photograph of Kline's Poultry Market near Amor Avenue, includes: chicken crates, Eagle stamps, and an old building with overhanging laundry. Note states, "marks the waning years of the Jewish neighborhood".
Black and white photograph of Mrs. Sanders' bedroom, looking northeast.
Otis-Sanders Mansion, 3133 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio., David Sanders Clark provided captions to the pictures.
Black and white photograph of Rev. Stepan Furdek. Handwritten notes on back of photograph state, "Cleveland and American Slovak pioneer and leader, founded First Catholic Slovak Union, died 1915"., Background painted over.
Black and white photograph of Clara E. Dolph, niece and adopted daughter of Mrs. E. Stiles. Clara accompanied the spy, Mrs. E. Stiles, to the south. Photograph taken by JNO Holyland Metropolitan Gallery, 250 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, D. C.. Note written on back of photograph states, "Clara E. Dolph Seaman". Clara later married William L. Seaman, and divorced from him. She married again, to Joseph Shevel in 1901.
Black and white photograph on album page of Mr. Tom L. Johnson (as Edwin Cheeryble) and Mr. W. B. Hale (as Charles Cheeryble) dressed up for a costume party.
Black and white group photograph. "More than 400 prominent Clevelanders gathered at Forest Hill, September 26, 1905 to honor Rockefeller (photo courtesy of Mrs. Albert D. Levy). Photo appears in Grace Goulder's 'John D. Rockefeller, The Cleveland Years', published 1973 by the Western Reserve Historical Society., Copy of original.
Black and white photograph of the "first country club-house, 1892, at Coits. Afterwards, it was burned". It was located on Lake Shore Boulevard at the foot of Eddy Road.
Black and white photograph of Harding and Woodrow Wilson (on left) in a car during the inauguration., Stamp on back "Cleveland Press Reference Dept., Jan. 24, 1953".