Scanned page 116 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing a typed text narrative about "Happy Joe" Jeffords, "Commander in chief" of the Canal boats that brought corn to the distillery. A black & white image of L. H. Murphy's house. Doc Hurd; George Davis
colorized image of a gentleman dressed in suit. Face covered in bandages. Stock postcard that was issued and stamped in different cities including Chicago. Possibly in reference to the Garment Workers Strike of 1910.
Photo image of scanned scrapbook page. Pictured: poem entitles "He Never Had a Home" by C. H. Pratt, written in 1888 and published in the Portsmouth Blade
Scanned page 224 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing a clipping of a black & white image of an unidentified man with the text "He That Loseth His Life Shall Find It" above. Image is cut from a newspaper page.
White, aged 4-page booklet program for the installation officers. Outside has green print an an anchor illustration. Inside are names and offices in black font.
Plastic black with white font license plate frame for Sunset Lanes. Top says in white font "I'd Rather Be Bowling" and the bottom says in white font "Sunset Lanes." Sunset Lanes is located at 2330 Seventeenth (17th) Street.
Photo image of scanned scrapbook page. Pictured: Colored image of a water scene labeled "In Days of Yore;" Indian Rock; Ashland Coal; Small article about The Kernel- another name for a Turkish Bath, used to relieve rheumatism
Photo image of scanned scrapbook page: colorized postcard of a riverboat traveling on the Ohio Canal.
Article about the good qualities of Portsmouth in the Emigrants Directory.
Photo image of scanned scrapbook page. Pictured: Sepia tone photo of a makeshift monument dated November 4, 1920, when prohibition came to town: "In Memory of a Good Town:" Marshal Fred Schmitt