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
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
colorized photo image of Blake Block located at Gallia and Lawson. Photo shows Flood Drugs at 595 (2109-2111) Gallia and Shoemaker Hardware at 581 Gallia. (before address changed by city.) About 1900 a well-known butcher named Thomas B. Blake purchased the property and developed five store rooms in the block facing Gallia Street at the corner of Lawson.
Colorized photo image of the Second Presbyterian Church building at Waller and Eighth (8th) Streets. The congregation had built its original building at this location in 1875 when the First Presbyterian congregation expanded. This building of "Humellstown brownstone" was dedicated December 3, 1911 at the same location.
Sepia color photo of the school building, located at the corner of West and Scioto Streets in Lucasville. Branch Rickey went to this school. In the 1920's modern brick schools replaced this wooden building.
Colorized image of the steel mill in New Boston, surrounding homes along the Ohio River. In 1909 the Whitaker Iron Works, the Laughlin Nail Works and the Portsmouth Steel Company combined to form the Whitaker-Glessner Company. In 1920 Wheeling Steel, La Belle Iron and Whitaker-Glessner became Wheeling Steel Corporation until 1946. (Frank H. Rowe-History of the Iron and Steel Industry in Scioto County, Ohio)
Colorized image of the train depot with horses, buggies, people. The Southern Express Company, agent Harry Rodgers, 534 Second (2nd) Street, is listed in the 1914 Portsmouth City Directory.