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Title: An everyday shipment weighing approximately 200,000 pounds is brought into Midvale Steel Company by train. The large building in the center is Link Belt Engineering Company photographed from the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad siding at Midvale, looking northeast toward Hunting Park Ave., ca. 1889
Date: 1889 Estimated
Photographer: Unknown
Photo ID: 5618PB1F1H
Collection: Midvale Company Photographs (1883 - 1953)
Repository: The Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives in the ILR School at Cornell University is the Catherwood Library unit that collects, preserves, and makes accessible special collections documenting the history of the workplace and labor relations. www.ilr.cornell.edu/library/kheel
Notes:
Copyright: There are no known U.S. copyright restrictions on this image. The digital file is owned by the Kheel Center which is making it freely available with the request that, when possible, the center be credited as its source.
Tags: Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives,Cornell University Library,Midvale Steel Company Photographs (1883 - 1953), Railroads, Buildings
WHO ARE WE AND WHAT DO WE DO? Glad you asked...
wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/Doc_Team
First office hours we hosted in the new Viewer 2 era! =)
Title: Women from the Walterboro Manufacturing Co. on strike in front of the barbed wire-surrounded building
Date: Unknown
Photographer: W. W. Smoak, Jr.
Photo ID: 5780PB32F16A
Collection: International Ladies Garment Workers Union Photographs (1885-1985)
Repository: The Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives in the ILR School at Cornell University is the Catherwood Library unit that collects, preserves, and makes accessible special collections documenting the history of the workplace and labor relations. www.ilr.cornell.edu/library/kheel
Notes: No additional information available.
Copyright: The copyright status of this image is unknown. It may also be subject to third party rights of privacy or publicity. Images are being made available for purposes of private study, scholarship, and research. The Kheel Center would like to learn more about this image and hear from any copyright owners who are not properly identified so that we may make the necessary corrections.
Tags: Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives,Cornell University Library,Picketing, Placards, Strikes, Women
Hit 'L' to view on large.
'C' Mill was built in 1847 by the Morris family and produced flannel and cloth which was sent to markets across Wales and Great Britain. The mill was also a significant local employer and later became the first supplier of power to the local village, which was the first in in the county to have electricity. The parish council paid £10.00 per annum for street lighting and houses were charged 5 shillings for one 60W lamp which then cost a further seven shillings and sixpence for 3 months electricity supply. Mr Morris turned off the power at 10.30pm each night believing that that was quite late enough for anyone to be awake. During the Second World War demand for flannel products fell and despite diversification into new products and the opening of a shop on the first floor, the mill went into decline, finally closing in 1962. Unfortunately, attempts to donate the property to the National Trust for preservation were unsuccessful as the owner was unable to provide a share of the funding and the mill was abandoned
Today it looks like very little has changed since the day the last shift finished and the machines fell silent almost sixty years ago. Protected by obscurity and relative isolation, it has become fossilised, frozen in time: bobbins are still wound with wool and the last cloth woven is still lying on the shuttle loom. Baskets of unspun wool stand waiting on the upper floor and books and papers lie scattered about, all covered in a thick layer of dust, deadening sound: a world away from the deafening clatter of a working mill.
Before any conservation treatment took place, the team carried out extensive documentation of the Jefferson Bible. This included microscopic analysis, photographic documentation, written documentation, and historical research. The team uncovered as much information as possible about the way Jefferson created the volume, as well as how the bookbinder took Jefferson's loose pieces of paper and constructed them into a book.
I've been watching these European Hornets the last few weeks as they bang into every other insect on the flowers (or so it seems). Today this hornet actually captured this American Copper butterfly and carried it up higher to a nearby tree limb. A few seconds later I saw what I thought was the butterfly come floating passed me, I thought it got away, but it turned out to be just one butterfly wing floating on the breeze. You can't see much in this shot, but I post it to remember the first time I've seen the hornet capture it's prey.
This little girl had taken the longest to perfect her color green she also sat the longest at the table to paint. She started with painting herself and then painted her entire family around her. She paid a lot of attention to detail in both the process of making her color and also painting with it.
Sarah
Pacific Northwest College of Art (PNCA) presents SuperTrash, an exhibition of 200 works of cult movie signage from the 1930s through the 1980s. The exhibition, which originated at The Andy Warhol Museum and went to the Anchorage Museum, opens at PNCA in Swigert Commons on September 4 and runs through October 21, 2014. Photos By Mario Gallucci.
Continuing my documentation of Pullip stock bits. ;D This time it's Lead's boots and guitar case!
I love these boots. Gavin usually perfers to go barefoot (show off those cute Tae Yang feet!), but if he's wearing shoes, it's almost always these. They're just a really great pair of doll shoes.
Thanks to Okeechobee Fest and Miami...I had a 7 day Step total of over 205 Thousand! Woo hoo! This may never happen again so I wanted to get it documented :)
Documentation photo of a Red-necked Grebe in Prince George's County, Maryland, March 8, 2014.
Found by Rob Ostrowski.
This is the work of a boy age 4.10 who chose Georgia O'Keefe's "Sunflower" painting as his inspiration. When he brought me his finished drawing he proudly held it up and declared, "I'm going to be an artist too!"
Susan
The Noble Matron from the Frauen Trachtenbuch. She has an awesome cloak and I want it. (I also really want her hat, but that's a project for another time).
Title: Industrial Siding
Descriptive Information: hdl.handle.net/1813.001/20433175
Date: Ca. 1961
Creator: Switchmen's Union of North America (SUNA)
Image ID: 5003pb53f177
Collection: U.S. President's Railroad Commission Photographs (#5003 P)
Repository: The Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives in the ILR School at Cornell University is the Catherwood Library unit that collects, preserves, and makes accessible special collections documenting the history of the workplace and labor relations. catherwood.library.cornell.edu/kheel
Collection Information: http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/htmldocs/KCL05003p.html
Copyright: The content in the "U.S. President's Railroad Commission Photographs Collection" (Kheel Center collection: #5003 P) is believed to be in the public domain, and is presented by Cornell University Library under the Guidelines for Using Text, Images, Audio, and Video from Cornell University Library Collections [www.library.cornell.edu/about/inside/policies/public-domain]. These images have been digitized from items in the Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives at Cornell University Library. More information about the physical collection can be found here: rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/htmldocs/KCL05003p.html. Responsibility for making an independent legal assessment of an item and securing any necessary permissions ultimately rests with persons desiring to use the item.
Presents a new notation for summarizing how a transmedia story progresses through the audience' experience
SX230HS.0496-Munich.
The Documentation Center Nazi Party Rallying Grounds is a museum in Nuremberg. It is in the north wing of the unfinished remains of the Congress Hall of the former Nazi party rallies. Its permanent exhibition "Fascination and Terror" is concerned with the causes, connections, and consequences of Nazi Germany. Topics that have a direct reference to Nuremberg are especially taken into account. Attached to the museum is an education forum. [Wikipedia]