Black & white sketch of the train depot located on Chillicothe Street between 14th (Fourteenth) & 15th (Fifteenth) Streets.
Image scanned from book, Pictorial Portsmouth; page 20
Scanned unnumbered page from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of a group of Scioto Valley Car Shop Men; and the Old Burgess Mill, West End.
Black and white group of the 6th grade class at Scioto Trail School (Clay) in 1961. Names listed on back (L-R):
1st row: Mark Harrigan, Randy Waugh, Russell Walter, Kenny Joe Martin, Susan Harrigan, Sandy Green, Cindy Long, Linda Hammond, Christine Bitler, Kenny Clauseng, Ray Mitchel
2nd row: Mike Hansgen, Bobby McFarland, Mike Kidd, Brenda Collier, Jane Sturdevant, Betty Stauffacher, Carol Cooper, Brice McClure, Lynn Greenshaw, Jeff Russel, Logan Stewart, Micky Kalb
3rd row: Connie Caldwell, Susie Hollis, Jacki Doll, Terri Suter, Judy Jardine, Cathy McGlone, Becky Caldwell, Sara Hammond, Cathy Cantor, Martha Sutter, Linda Spires, Judy Benner
Teacher: John Kaltenbach
Photo image of scanned scrapbook page 97. Scioto Telegram (1820); Lawrence County Gazette; Richard Johnson (1821); Portsmouth Sunday School (1825); LaFayette; Henry Utt (1829); S. S. Mattocks; Alice Kingsbury (1864); Massie Hall; Fanchon the Crickett; Dr. Burr (1867); Women's Suffrage Society (1870)
The Scioto Fire Brick Company, incorporated in 1872 with John Peebles as president, was in Sciotoville a few miles up the Ohio River from Portsmouth. This mammoth 13 acre plant, between the river and the railroad, had an almost inexhaustible mine of raw material. It produced Fire Brick, Clay In-walls and Hearths for blast furnaces, tiles of all sizes, Arch, Key and Wedge, Circular and Split Brick from the very best Scioto Clay. --from the Portsmouth Blade Industrial Edition, 1898
The Portsmouth Fire Brick Company was actually located at the corner of Gallia and Campbell, the later site of Harbinson-Walker Refactories.
The Scioto Star Fire Brick Company was in Sciotoville, Ohio between the river and the railroad. It was incorporated in 1872 with John Peebles as president. The 13 acre plant made Fire Brick, Clay In-walls and Hearths for blast furnaces, tiles of all sizes, Arch, Key and Wedge, Circular and Split Brick from the very best Scioto Clay --from the Portsmouth Blade Industrial Edition, 1898
black & white photo of the temporary bridge contractor Henry Ruel built over the Scioto River in 1914 to carry a compressed air pipe to the construction site of the piers of the new bridge.
Photo image of scanned scrapbook page. Black and white photo of the Second (2nd) Street Scioto River Bridge (1915-1997) above, and below is a black and white photo of some men at the start of building the first U.S. Grant Bridge over the Ohio River in 1926.