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Archive Search Results


Showing 1 - 9 of 9 , query time: 0.01s
Thumbnail for 'Ed Rodgers fishing trip on the Piney'
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Ed Rodgers, Chester Tolbey and Bill Robertson leaving for a fishing trip on the Piney. The men are mounted on horses with a pack horse in front of Tolbey. A dog is visible in left midground, behind Rodgers. Photo was taken near Emmett Nottingham's place and looks southwest toward Wayne Creek (Beaver Creek). Bachelor Gulch is to the far right. The blacksmith shop is on the far right, on its original site. [Title supplied from catalog prepared...
Thumbnail for 'McCoy lane'
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"The McCoy lane looking west. This 1912 photo [says 1911 on verso of photo] shows the front part of the Hotel on the left, [on the right] the blacksmith shop, the big red barn and the front of the old log barn and beyond it, the bridge across Rock Creek. The big barn, approximately fifty by sixty feet in size, was of frame construction and built by C. H. McCoy in 1902. It had stalls for twenty horses and a loft that held ten tons of loose hay....
Thumbnail for 'Walsh Blacksmith shop'
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Mickey Walsh's blacksmith shop on Eagle Street in Red Cliff. Three men and a dog are standing in front of the builiding. [Title supplied from catalog prepared by the Eagle County Historical Society.]
Thumbnail for 'Blacksmith Shop at Red Cliff'
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c.1920: Blacksmith shop at Red Cliff, run by Mike Walsh. Pictured are Mickey Walsh (front row, right), Oscar Myer and Mike Walsh (on right). There are five men seated and four standing in front of double doors on sidewalk. To the far left is a wagon wheel; in foreground is a sled with chains. [Title supplied from catalog prepared by the Eagle County Historical Society.]
Thumbnail for 'Blacksmith shop'
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Interior of the blacksmith shop. The building is actually the home that Jack Oleson was born in at Gypsum. He moved the building to the Diamond S Ranch in 2012. A tour of the ranch was conducted by the Eagle County Historical Society and the Diamond S Ranch on October 5, 2013.
Thumbnail for 'E. Carlson Blacksmith'
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Three men standing in front of the E. Carlson Blacksmith shop, Red Cliff, Colorado.
Thumbnail for 'Michael A. Walsh'
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Mike Walsh standing at the anvil in his blacksmith shop. Ferrier equipment, horseshoes visible in foreground and hanging from the rafters. "Saturday afternnon Mike Walsh and his son, Billy, stopped in town a short while, during which Mike visited with a number of old friends, among them the editor and Dr. Hotopp. Mike was eighty-six years of age a few days ago, and a number of his close friends threw a party in his honor on the occasion. More...
Thumbnail for 'Blacksmith shop'
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Four men in Mike Walsh's blacksmith shop. There is an anvil in the lower left corner and a fire in the lower right corner.
Thumbnail for 'Walsh Family marker'
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Walsh family marker at Greenwood Cemetery for: "Mother, Emily Agatha, 1856--1928; Leonard, 1900--1902; Mary Alice, 1895--1898; father Michael Ambrose, 1848--1939." Crosses are engraved on either side of the family name; and anvil and hammer are engraved beneath the family name.