Photo image of scanned scrapbook page 462. Joseph Wheeler; Wheeler's Academy (1818); Market Street; Joseph Waddle; Kendall's; Dr. de St. Liger; The Courier (1834); The Gazette (1818); Reeside & Co; E.Strauss & Bro; Corson and Kendall; McAfee & Co; Flint Glass Works (1850s); Thomas H. Jackson; Daguerreg Gallery; Lady's Notion Store; M.L. Kreider & Co; United States Hotel; A. Heckinger & Co; Foundry; Pig Iron Corner; Nathan Morgan
Photo image of scanned scrapbook page 441. Joseph Welch; Swan Hotel; Union; George Thornton; John H. Thornton S.E. and J.W. Varner; Louis Rosenstock; Edward N. Hope; W.W. Little; Fred A. Lodwick; Thomas Dugan & Co; Felix Loth; J.J. Reinert; Charles Ludgate; Frank McFarlin; O.A. Lodwick; J.C. McGinley; Damarin & Co; W.B. Maklem; City Shoe Store; Massie Block; John J. Martin; John Maule; Nebraska Maxwell; J.I. Merser; Enos Reed; H.D. Ziegler & Co; Fred Legler; Legler House; Ben Woods; Valley House; T.G. Lloyd; Adam Kerr; Carl F. Thieme; Burke Fender & Co; C.G. Powers
Photo image of scanned scrapbook page 349. Joseph Riggs & Co (1825); Biggs House; Calico (1801); John Quincy (1843); Bigelow Church (1834); James Emmett (1832); Union Mills; Scioto and Hocking Valley Railroad; B. & O.; Wm. G. Whitkey (1854); Epizootic (1872); Adam Express Co; Telephone Co (1850); Spry Building
Scanned unnumbered page from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of Jos. N. Murray; newsboys; and Ricky "Of Course". An undated list of newsboys and a program for an instrumental and vocal concert under the direction of Professor J. P. Czerwinski at Wilhelm's Opera House in 1884.
Blacksmith Christy Hare made this tomahawk tobacco pipe for pioneer settler Joseph Miller (1762-1845). It measures 6.5 by 14 inches (16.51 by 35.56 cm). Miller kept the tomahawk, which he used as both a weapon and a pipe for smoking tobacco, with him, even when attending religious services. He reportedly battered the bowl of the pipe while attempting to shoot a bear in a cave. Joseph Miller was a scout for the federal government, exploring the Northwest Territory and fighting American Indians. He was one of the earliest residents of Gallipolis. Miller was reportedly involved in one of the last fights between settlers and American Indians in Ohio. After the signing of the Treaty of Greenville established peace between the settlers and the American Indians, the government no longer needed scouts. Miller moved to Lawrence County, where he farmed and hunted.
Scanned unnumbered page from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of Jos. Merrell and Mrs. Janet K. Williams. Clippings of advertisements for A. C. Williams Shoes; Y.M.C.A. Fair in 1869; and the strawberry festival in Massie Hall for the Soldier's Relief Society in 1864.