The records consist of photocopies of miscellaneous documents of the Empire Steel and Iron Company, the originals of which are in the possession of the National Canal Museum at Easton, Pa. Most of them seem to have come from the Mount Hope site....
Includes articles: The Fairy Ship of the Seas (about S.S. Conte Rosso); Ship-to-Shore Telephony Has Arrived; Ex-German Liner Overhauled And Renamed (about German vessel Princess Matoika renamed President Arthur); Our Viewpoint from the Masthead;...
Watercolors of "modern" French chairs done by William Pahlmann while at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts (later renamed Parsons School of Design) Paris Atelier, 1929.
Watercolor of room at Versailles done by William Pahlmann while at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts (later renamed Parsons School of Design) Paris Atelier, 1929.
Watercolor of "modern" French interior in Paris done by William Pahlmann while at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts (later renamed Parsons School of Design) Paris Atelier, 1929.
Watercolor of "'modern" French interior in Paris done by William Pahlmann while at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts (later renamed Parsons School of Design) Paris Atelier, 1929.
Watercolor of interiors at Versailles done by William Pahlmann while at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts (later renamed Parsons School of Design) Paris Atelier, 1929.
Watercolor of interiors at Versailles done by William Pahlmann while at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts (later renamed Parsons School of Design) Paris Atelier, 1929.
Watercolor of room at Versailles done by William Pahlmann while at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts (later renamed Parsons School of Design) Paris Atelier, 1929.
Modern American dye industry was born in this handful of buildings at Deepwater, New Jersey on July 17, 1917 when DuPont processed its first successful charge of sulfur black. Acute shortage of dyes during World War I precipitated the company's...