Written on back: "Cover: Breaking ground at last month's impressive ceremony at the site of the proposed electric furnace are Mrs. Nancy Huston Hansen and Charles L. Huston Jr., president of the company. Mrs. Hansen is a daughter of President...
Written on back: "The plate shown on the opposite side is one of the largest plates we have made - length and width considered. This plate was supplied against an order covering four plates in all - the material being ordered by the Phoenix Iron...
Written on back: "The plate shown on the opposite side is one of the largest plates we have made - length and width considered. This plate was supplied against an order covering four plates in all - the material being ordered by the Phoenix Iron...
Written on back: "The plate shown on the opposite side is one of the largest plates we have made - length and width considered. This plate was supplied against an order covering four plates in all - the material being ordered by the Phoenix Iron...
Written on back: "Reading from left to right, facing camera: Hon. W. Butler Windle, Chairman, Chester County Council of Defense; Lessing J. Rosenwald, Chief, Bureau of Industrial Conservation, War Production Board; Robert W. Wolcott, President,...
Written on back: "Father of the Present Management Whose Patience and Far-Sighted Wisdom here Instrumental in the Present Prosterity and [illegible] of the Company."
Written on back: "The Cover: A familiar landmark on W. Lincoln Highway in Coatesville is the Lukens Steel Company bridge. After dark, the glow of the Lukens sign high up on the Open Hearth combines with the flash of headlights from passing cars to...
Written on back: "1956 annual report: Lukens T-1 steel - 60 tons of it - went into the dipper and related parts of a big power shovel built by the Marion Power Shovel Company. The shovel has a bucket with a 45-cubic yard capacity and can dump its...
Written on back: "taken about the time he entered into partnership with Dr. Chas. Huston. He served as captain of a company organized towards the end of the Civil War."
Written on front: "Home of Rebecca Lukens, famed nineteenth century woman Ironmaster, it stands amid the twentieth century facilities of Lukens Steel Company, oldest steelmaker in America."
Written on back: "President Lukens Steel Company, taken from the office of the Lukens Steel Co. to show their relative positions and their proximity to the works."
Written on back: "Presentation of Lukens Steel Company Scholarship Grant June 1951 to Jack Gable Conner by Stewart Huston, Vice President & Secretary."
Written on back: "Picture showing in the foreground, first, Lukens Steel Company Main Office. Next residence of Charles L. Huston; then Huston Mansion, and finally the old Lukens Mansion, with the Lukens Steel Co. in the background."
Written on back: "With the famous United Nations Building in the background, Mr. Charles Lukens Huston, Jr., left, President of the 150-year-old Lukens Steel Company of Coatesville, Penna., presents the original copy of the Coatesville Declaration,...
Written on back: "Charles L. Huston, Jr., (left) President, Lukens Steel Company and the Hon. James J. Wadsworth, permanent U.S. representative to the United Nations, during presentation of Coatesville Declaration at World Affairs Center, Monday,...
Written on back: "Charles Lukens Huston, Jr., President Lukens Steel Company (left) Ambassador James J. Wadsworth, permanent U.S. representative to the United Nations, Frederick Blake Payne delegate to the U.S. Mission to the United Nations, and...
Written on back: "Charles L. Huston, Jr., (left) President, Lukens Steel Company and the Hon. James J. Wadsworth, permanent U.S. representative to the United Nations, during presentation of Coatesville Declaration at World Affairs Center, Monday,...
Written on back: "Charles Lukens Huston, Jr., President Lukens Steel Company, addressing press group during presentation of the Coatesville Declaration to Ambassador James J. Wadsworth at the World Affairs Center on Monday, October 17, 1960."