Various size black & white images in book. Church images are sketches and street scene is photo image that pictires George Davis & Co; Schlager Coal Office; City Scales Building; M. W. Thompson, Merchant
page 17- black & white images of various sizes in book. Featuring Heinsch's Cheap Store; members of the orchestra listed as: Fred Pabst, Charles Amann, William Lahmering, A. Knittel, Henry Clausing, Charles Zottmann; John Wurster
Colorized image of the Second (2nd) Street School built in 1850 on the southwest corner of Second (2nd) and Chillicothe Streets. It was razed in 1917 and replaced by the new Henry Massie School.
Colorized image of the Garfield School building which was built in 1915 at the corner of Gallia Street & Mabert Road. It was enlarged in 1919 and a gymnasium was added in 1957. It closed in 1975 and in 1976 the Scioto County Commissioners bought it. The Vern Riffe School is in the building now.
Colorized photo image of the Sixth (6th) Street Methodist Church at the corner of Sixth (6th) and Chillicothe Streets. This building was razed in 1928 for the construction of the third Portsmouth Masonic Temple.
Black & white photo image of the stated 100 Acres of the Steel Plant in New Boston. The plant was known as Whitaker-Glessner Company from 1909-1920. From 1920 to 1946 it was Wheeling Steel Company.
Colorized Image of Government Square on Gallia Street. Views of Columbia Theatre, Moeller meat Market, and Whites Jewelers. The tall white building in the center is the First National Bank before it was doubled in size in about 1924.
Colored image of the funeral Home, built in 1924 at 915 Ninth (9th) Street by Frederick Carl Daehler. He had come to Portsmouth in 1854 after leaving his native Germany and had his business at several other locations. He built this as a combination furniture store and mortuary company. After his death in 1926, his family closed the furniture part.
Sepia tone photo image of group of men in front of building, 2 kids on roof. This was formerly "Camp Limberger" just a short distance north of Crichton Inn at Rushtown. The campground was adjacent to four transportation routes: Scioto River, Ohio & Erie Canal, Galena Turnpike(route 104), and Norfolk & Western RR.