View allAll Photos Tagged Persistent,
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,4574
Subject (TGM): Animals; Birds; Chickens; Birds' eggs & nests; Fairies; Clowns; Fantasy; Household soap; Dressing & grooming equipment; Cosmetics & soap;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,2183
Subject (TGM): Animals; Livestock; Tobacco; Tobacco products; Lilies; Turkeys; Roosters; Peacocks; Dogs; Swine; Sheep; Geese; Hens; Chickens; Horses; Premiums; Farmhouses; Goats;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,2651
Subject (TGM): Cats; Animals in human situations; Poetry; Shoe shining; Patents; Chemical industry;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,3298
Subject (TGM): Animals; Caricatures; Humorous pictures; Dogs; Millinery; Dry goods stores; Corsets;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,2201
Subject (TGM): Birds; Animals; Spices; Coffee; Coffee industry; Food industry; Embossed prints;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,3248
Subject (TGM): Baskets; Flowers; Plants; Violets; Shoes; Shoe stores;
Persistent Toll Violator vehicles interdicted by MTA Bridges & Tunnels at the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge on Thursday, Feb 9, 2023.
(Aaron Donovan / MTA)
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,2186
Subject (TGM): Saints; Christmas presents; Typewriters; Children; Holidays; Fictitious characters; Postcards; Machinery industry;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,4526
Subject (TGM): Children; Boys; Girls; Household soap; Wash tubs; Children blowing bubbles; Bubbles; Grocery stores;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,278
Subject (TGM): Women; Appliances; Sewing machines; Sewing machine industry; Postcards;
Persistent URL: floridamemory.com/items/show/295354
Local call number: WHC321
Title: Modeling bathing suits in the dunes - Daytona Beach
Date: July 1953
Physical descrip: 1 photonegative - b&w - 5 x 4 in.
Series Title: Department of Commerce Collection
Repository: State Library and Archives of Florida
500 S. Bronough St., Tallahassee, FL, 32399-0250 USA, Contact: 850.245.6700, Archives@dos.myflorida.com
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,2543
Subject (TGM): Angels; Earth; Globes; Patent medicines; Pharmacists; Drugstores; Cupids;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.miamioh.edu/cdm/ref/collection/postcards/id/269
Subject (TGM): Mountains; Nature; Rocks; Colorado--Arapahoe Peaks
Critique welcome.
What do you think of the diagonal presentation?
Taken for the Look Down theme of the 52 Weeks of 2024 weekly challenge group.
Originally I was going to do something different, but somebody posted something similar. So when I was walking the dogs I was looking for something else. Tried a couple things - substandard. Then I saw a lone blade of grass. So I looked for a better one and found this. Pretty happy with it.
DSC_5074a
Persistent effort can yield weight loss results. The key, however, is to expend more energy than you take in! LOL! 😏 😀 😁
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,4517
Subject (TGM): Children; Girls; Cornucopias; Laundry; Starch industry;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,2117
Subject (TGM): Women; Emblem pictures; Flags; Eagles; Baking powder; Food industry; Trademarks; Flour & meal industry;
Persistent URL: floridamemory.com/items/show/165394
Local call number: PHF075
Title: Miami Hardward Paint & Glass Company
Date: ca. 1930
Physical descrip: 1 photoprint - b&w - 7 x 11 in.
Series Title: William A. Fishbaugh Collection
Repository: State Library and Archives of Florida, 500 S. Bronough St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 USA. Contact: 850.245.6700. Archives@dos.myflorida.com
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,3809
Subject (TGM): Coffee industry; Holidays; Easter cards; Children; Girls; Sheep;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,2645
Subject (TGM): Children; Girls; Pets; Dogs; Cats; Patent medicines; Pharmacists; Drugstores;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,4577
Subject (TGM): Palettes; Artists' devices; Artists' materials; Paints & varnishes; Animals; Cats; Pets;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/snyder,3802
Subject (TGM): Football players; Sports; Universities and colleges; Group portraits;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,2306
Subject (TGM): Angels; Lingerie; Cameras; Photographers; Photographic apparatus & supplies; Photography; Agaves; Cupids;
History
Early years
Ham in the early 17th century was bestowed by James I on his son, Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales.[4]
The house was built in 1610 by Sir Thomas Vavasour, Knight Marshal to James I. It originally comprised an H-plan layout consisting of nine bays and three storeys. The Thames-side location was ideal for Vavasour, allowing him to move between the courts at Richmond, London and Windsor.[5][6] Prince Henry died in 1612, and the lands at Ham and Petersham passed to James' second son, Charles, several years prior to his coronation in 1625.[4] After Vavasour's death in 1620, the house was granted to John Ramsay, 1st Earl of Holderness until his death in 1626.
William Murray, 1st Earl of Dysart[edit]
In 1626 Ham House was leased to William Murray, whipping boy and close childhood friend of Charles I. Murray's initial lease was for 39 years and, in 1631, a further 14 years added but this did not give long term security of tenure for Murray's family. When George Cole had to sell his property in Petersham as part of the enclosure of Richmond Park in 1637, he made over the remaining leases of the Manors of Ham and Petersham to Murray. Murray sought to obtain the freehold but both this and a further bid in 1641 were unsuccessful.[6] The neighbouring Manor of Canbury (Kingston) was also granted to William in 1640, but, in 1641, he passed it to Thomas Bruce, Lord Elgin, a relative of his wife.[7] William and his wife, Catherine, extensively redecorated and refurbished the interior of the house, many features of which survive to this day including the great staircase.[5]
Prior to the outbreak of the English Civil War, Murray shrewdly transferred ownership of the house to his wife for the duration of her life and thereafter to his four daughters, to be held in trust. The principal trustee was Lord Elgin who, as an important Scottish Presbyterian and Parliamentarian supporter, thus afforded the estate and family a degree of political protection.[6]
During the Civil War, the house and estates were sequestrated, but persistent appeals by Catherine regained them in 1646 on payment of a £500 fine.[8][9] Thus Catherine skilfully defended ownership of the house throughout the Civil War and Commonwealth, and, despite Murray's close ties with the Royalist cause, the house remained in the family's possession. Shortly after the execution of Charles I on 30 January 1649, Catherine died at Ham on 18 July 1649. The parliamentarians sold off much of the Royal Estate, including the Manors of Ham and Petersham. These, inclusive of Ham House, were bought for £1,131.18s on 13 May 1650 by William Adams, the steward acting on behalf of Murray's eldest daughter, Elizabeth and her husband Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Baronet of Helmingham Hall, Suffolk. Ham House became Elizabeth and Lionel's primary residence, as Murray was predominately exiled in France.[6][10]
Elizabeth and Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Baronet of Helmingham Hall[edit]
Elizabeth continued her parents' political support of the Royalist cause and she and her husband became members of the Sealed Knot. Between 1649 and 1661, Elizabeth bore eleven children, five of whom survived to adulthood; Lionel, Thomas, William, Elizabeth and Catherine. Elizabeth and Lionel made few substantial changes to the house during this busy time. On the Restoration in 1660, Charles II rewarded Elizabeth with a pension of £800 for life and, whilst many of the parliamentarian sales of Royal lands were put aside, Elizabeth retained the titles to the Manors of Ham and Petersham. In addition, in about 1665, following William's death, Lionel was granted freehold of 75 acres (30 ha; 0.117 sq mi) of land in Ham and Petersham including that surrounding the house and a 61-year lease of 289 acres (117 ha; 0.452 sq mi) of demesne lands. The grant was made in trust to Robert Murray for the daughters of the, then, late Earl of Dysart, "in consideration of the service done by the late Earl of Dysart and his Daughter, and of the losses sustained by them by the enclosure of the New Park."[6][11] Lionel died in 1668, leaving his Ham and Petersham estate to Elizabeth.
Elizabeth and John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale[edit]
Elizabeth became associated with John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale. In 1671 Lauderdale was granted by Letters patent full freehold rights to the Manors of Ham and Petersham and the 289 acres of leased land. In 1672 Elizabeth and Lauderdale were married, and, with Lauderdale's part in the CABAL, the family remained close to the heart of court intrigue.
South face of Ham House showing the in-filled "H" extension.
The couple made extensive changes to the house from 1673. Elizabeth consulted her cousin, William Bruce, and Maitland commissioned William Samwell, extending the house into the south part of the "H", making it "double pile", two rooms deep, across its breadth.[5]
The eldest daughter of Elizabeth and Lionel, also named Elizabeth (1659–1735), married Archibald Campbell, 1st Duke of Argyll in Edinburgh in 1678. Their first child, John Campbell, 2nd Duke of Argyll, was born at Ham House in 1680.[12] and their second son, Archibald Campbell, 3rd Duke of Argyll was born in the same room a few years later.[6]
On Lauderdale's death in 1682 he left the Ham and Petersham property to Elizabeth, thereby securing the estate for the Tollemache dynasty.[6] However, Elizabeth also inherited her husband's debts including mortgages on his former properties in England and Scotland and her latter years were marred by financial dispute with her brother-in-law, Charles. Even the intervention of the newly crowned James II failed to reconcile them and the matter was finally settled in her favour in the Scottish courts in 1688. Whilst this may have suppressed Elizabeth's lavish lifestyle, she went on to make further alterations to the house at Ham, opening the Hall ceiling and creating the Round Gallery in about 1690.[6] Elizabeth Maitland continued to live at Ham House until her death in 1698.
wikipedia
The Minch House, a stone farmhouse, now part of the Sugar River Wildlife Area, Dane County, Wisconsin, USA.
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,3992
Subject (TGM): Coffee industry; Tea industry; Domestic life; Women; Animals; Pets; Dogs;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,3839
Subject (TGM): Coffee industry; Women; Hats; Portraits; Tea industry;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,1310
Subject (TGM): Roses; Flowers; Dental hygiene; Dental offices; Dentistry; Teeth;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,3492
Subject (TGM): Birds; Coffee; Food industry; Coffee industry; Premiums; Tree limbs;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,2537
Subject (TGM): Women; Hats; Fashion prints; Player pianos; Pianos; Musical instruments; Musical instrument industry;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,1223
Subject (TGM): Flowers; Birds; Parrots; Owls; Moon; Trademarks; Baking powder; Flour & meal industry; Food industry; Embossed prints;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,371
Subject (TGM): Children; Animals; Children & animals; Cats; Girls; Dolls; Children misbehaving; Paints & varnishes; Paint industry; Clothing & dress; Dyeing; Chemical industry;
Persistent effort can yield weight loss results. The key, however, is to expend more energy than you take in! LOL! 😏 😀 😁
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,281
Subject (TGM): Cats; Dragonflies; Flowers; Daisies; Spices; Coffee; Coffee industry; Food industry;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,3083
Subject (TGM): Women; Sewing; Sewing equipment & supplies; Pattern sheets; Sewing machines; Sewing machine industry; Appliances;
Original Caption: Map of Oregon traced in the Adjutant General's Office, 07/14/1874
Created By: U.S. House of Representatives. (03/04/1789 - )
From: Record Group/Collection: 233
From: Accompanying Papers of the 43rd Congress, 12/01/1873 - 03/03/1875
Record Hierarchy Level: Level
Production Dates: 07/14/1874
Persistent URL: arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=306560
Reference Unit: Center for Legislative Archives (NWL), National Archives Building
Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted
Persistent park and Rider.
First Devon And Cornwall 60918 was a Wright Eclipse bodied Volvo B7L new to the central York operation of the one time Rider group. In York it originally carried a special livery, based on First's Barbie colours, for use on the York park and ride services. It initially moved south to join the West of England fleet at Minehead, but when those routes were spun off to the First South West operation as The Buses of Somerset, 60918 eventually managed to find its way down to Plymouth to operate the Coypool park and ride contract, again wearing a variation of the standard First group colours. After the South Devon operations of First were sold to Stagecoach, 60918 temporarily remained in Plymouth on hire to Stagecoach, but when new buses arrived in Plymouth, it returned to First who sent it back up to Somerset. Then in 2018, 60918 returned 'home' to Yorkshire, though this time at Bradford.
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,989
Subject (TGM): Animals; Animals in human situations; Rodents; Rodent control; Mice; Rats; Pest control; Flies; Insects; Ants; Gophers; Chipmunks; Bedbugs; Patent medicines; Weasels; Moles (Animals);
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,1022
Subject (TGM): Flowers; Floods; Houses; Water; Boats; Rowboats; Sunrises & sunsets; Windows;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,4640
Subject (TGM): Clowns; Music stands; Music; Sweeping & dusting; Books; Bookselling; Bookstores; Stationery; Stationery trade;
Persistent URL: digital.lib.miamioh.edu/cdm/compoundobject/collection/pos...
Subject: Auditoriums; Performances; Community centers; Ohio--Canton; miami digital collections; bowden postcard collection