326 - 350 of 2,016
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TitleCollection Number And NamePhoto Number
326 "Old America Comes Alive" (Buildings) Illustration: Plimoth Plantion brochureP0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_11_0423
327 "Old America Comes Alive" (Buildings) Chapter # Illustration, page number : The Fort meeting house, Plimoth Plantation, Plymouth, MassachusettsP0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_11_0424
328 "Old America Comes Alive" (Buildings) Illustration: Plimoth PlantationP0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_11_0425
329 "Old America Comes Alive" (Buildings) Chapter 6 Illustration: Ironmaster's House, Saugus Ironworks Restoration, Saugus, Massachusetts (drawing)P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_11_0426
330 "Old America Comes Alive" (Buildings) Chapter 13 Illustration: Second Berry-Lincoln Store (replica), New Salem, IllinoisP0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_11_0427
331 "Old America Comes Alive" (Buildings) Illustration: Winslow House, (built by Judge Isaac Winslow), west side interior, Plimoth Plantation, Plymouth, MassachusettsP0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_11_0428
332 "Old America Comes Alive" (Buildings) Illustration: Howland House, Plimoth Plantation, Plymouth, MassachusettsP0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_11_0429
333 "Old America Comes Alive" (Buildings) Illustration: Amoureaux house interior, Sainte Genevieve, MissouriP0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_11_0430
334 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Sugar beets) Chapter 5 Illustration, before page 29: The sugar beet is the real factory, manufacturing sugar from sunlight, water and carbon.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0431
335 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Sugar beets) Chapter 3 Illustration, page 23: The beet seeds are rough, irregular little objects, not much larger than an apple seed.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0432
336 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Sugar beets) Chapter 3 Illustration, before page 18: Poorly formed beets with many "sprangled" divisions, grow from the ordinary beet seed. Well-shaped beets, long and tapered, grow from the "segmented" or single germ seed.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0433
337 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Sugar beets) Chapter 8 Illustration, before page 56: From the weighing in room, the beets were carried by conveyor belt to the storage piles.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0434
338 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 2 Illustration, before page 10: Mr. Travis had spread manure over the field, and then plowed that manure into the ground.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0435
339 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 5 Illustration, before page 30: The wide, ruffled leaves stood up strong and fresh in the sun, and the whole field was a bright green carpet. (Beet field of Frank Parker, Stantan district, Idaho Falls, Idaho)P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0436
340 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 7 Illustration, before page 45: The high school boys and girls laughed and sang as if they were on a picnic.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0437
341 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 8 Illustration, before page 51: On the Jensen farm, the beets were loaded by hand. (Loading beets on the McCoy beet field are Eulalie and Orvidean Howell and Stanley and Blair Cole)P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0438
342 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 5 Illustration, before page 25: Bill [Wilson] dipped the siphon into the ditch, filling it with water. When he laid this over the brink of the ditch, with one end in the furrow and one in the water, it acted as a siphon and kept drawing water from the main ditch.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0439
343 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 4 Illustration, before page 25: [Robert Brown,] Peter's father removed the headgate, and the water ran into their ditch.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0440
344 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 4 Illustration, before page 25: The head stream was lined with cement in order to prevent the wasting of water by seepage through the soil.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0441
345 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 7 Illustration, page 60: Peter found that topping beets by hand required a special knack. (10 year old Eulalie Howell is an expert at topping, just ask her Dad.)P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0442
346 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 4 Illustration, before page 23: Mr. Jensen irrigated in the old-fashioned way, by running the water from the head stream down through the furrows of the field.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0443
347 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 5 Illustration, before page 29: When the "true leaves" showed above the ground, it was time to thin the beets.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0444
348 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 5 Illustration, before page 30: When they got tired of stooping over, the workers knelt down to thin the beets.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0445
349 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 4 Illustration, before page 25: Down the rows went Bill [Wilson] and Mr. [Robert] Brown, keeping the water moving along the furrows.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0446
350 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Farming) Chapter 4 Illustration, before page 25: The water must be kept moving down the furrows, so the plants won't be flooded out.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_12_0447
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