Scanned page 81 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of Happy Joe; L. H. Murphy's house (128 E 2nd); D. D. Jones; and an unidentified auditorium. A handwritten message from Nancy Montgomery.
Scanned unnumbered page from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white image of an unidentified man; typed text of the lyrics to I'll Take You Home Again Kathleen by Thomas P. Westendorf; black & white image of Frank Kricker; a ticket for Westminster Choir at Second Presbyterian Church; and a clipping for Belt Railroad.
Scanned unnumbered page from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of Kinney's Lane and John Gilgen and a cutout of printed text from an "Emigrants Directory" with Notices of Cities on the Ohio River below Pittsburg.
Scanned unnumbered page from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing printed text of the lyrics James Thornton's "I'm the Man That Wrote Ta-ra-ra-Boom-de-ay"
Scanned page 90 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white image of Market and Second (2nd) Streets during the 1884 flood and fire; and the corner of Chillicothe and Third (3rd), formerly Alspaugh Furniture, Lewis Furniture Company purchased the inventory in 1920, and the building in 1925.
Scanned unnumbered page from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of Spence Chapel; First Baptist Church; Louis F. Lowry; and a memorial for Joseph Tanner.
Scanned page 92 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of John M. Valodin; Power's Corner, Fourth (4th) and Chillicothe Streets was the future site of Portsmouth's second Masonic Temple built in 1906; L. Wise; W.H. McCall; Lawson's Mound.
Scanned page 93 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing a printed Memorial service announcement at the Elk Parlors; a printed letter to H.A. Lorberg from John G. Whittier regarding receipt of a book of views of Portsmouth; and a black & white image of Jason C. Adams, City Clerk.
Scanned unnumbered page from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing typed text about a sexton (John McNeal) of Greenlawn Cemetery who removed the coffin of a woman and her twin babies whose bodies were perfectly preserved after 6 years.
Scanned page 94 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of Weston Lodwick; Company H, waiting for the train; Company H, 4th O.V.I. return from Cuba, 1898 (Spanish-American War); Ph. Zoellner; Charles Kendall; Morton Club; and an ad clipping for H. A. Reed, General Sign Writer.