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Box 167

 Container

Contains 34 Results:

Harding-Coolidge and Cox-Franklin D. Roosevelt Campaign Buttons and Harding Memorial Badge, 1920-1923

 Item — Box: 167
Identifier: 2214.BT0019
Scope and Contents From the Series: Buttons: This series is predominantly composed of combination items made of plastic, metal, and paper. Button technology was developed by the Whitehead & Hoag company of Newark, New Jersey, and was used extensively starting in the 1896 Presidential campaign. Celluloid plastic was used exclusively until the 1940s; the buttons frequently are referred to as "celluloid buttons". Many early buttons contained actual photographic portraits. Subsequent development of a lithographic printing...
Dates: 1920-1923

Votes For Women Buttons, 1915-1920

 Item — Box: 167
Identifier: 2214.BT0020
Scope and Contents From the Series: Buttons: This series is predominantly composed of combination items made of plastic, metal, and paper. Button technology was developed by the Whitehead & Hoag company of Newark, New Jersey, and was used extensively starting in the 1896 Presidential campaign. Celluloid plastic was used exclusively until the 1940s; the buttons frequently are referred to as "celluloid buttons". Many early buttons contained actual photographic portraits. Subsequent development of a lithographic printing...
Dates: 1915-1920

Franklin D. Roosevelt-Garner Campaign and Inaugural Items, 1936-1937

 Item — Box: 167
Identifier: 2214.BT0025a
Scope and Contents From the Series: Buttons: This series is predominantly composed of combination items made of plastic, metal, and paper. Button technology was developed by the Whitehead & Hoag company of Newark, New Jersey, and was used extensively starting in the 1896 Presidential campaign. Celluloid plastic was used exclusively until the 1940s; the buttons frequently are referred to as "celluloid buttons". Many early buttons contained actual photographic portraits. Subsequent development of a lithographic printing...
Dates: 1936-1937

Quay Campaign Button, 1896

 Item — Box: 167
Identifier: 2214.BT0058
Scope and Contents From the Series: Buttons: This series is predominantly composed of combination items made of plastic, metal, and paper. Button technology was developed by the Whitehead & Hoag company of Newark, New Jersey, and was used extensively starting in the 1896 Presidential campaign. Celluloid plastic was used exclusively until the 1940s; the buttons frequently are referred to as "celluloid buttons". Many early buttons contained actual photographic portraits. Subsequent development of a lithographic printing...
Dates: 1896