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Box 5

 Container

Contains 149 Results:

Item 5: Exterior view of unidentified mill [Ogden Mill?]. Cohoes, N.Y

 File — Box: 5, Folder: 21
Scope and Contents

ca. 1890. Photographed by J. H. New. Exterior view of mill in winter. Ogden Mill was a hosiery mill; at some point in the 19th century it was purchased by Harmony Mills. 17.5 x 8.5 cm.

Format: Stereoptic print.

Dates: 1842-2003

Item 1: Glenham Carpet Works, Glenham, N.Y.

 File — Box: 5, Folder: 22
Scope and Contents

n.d. Written on reverse in ink, Old Glenham Carpet Works from near the dam. Groville, N.Y., present "Texaco". 18 x 10 cm.

Format: Stereoptic print.

Dates: 1842-2003

Item 1: Mills and Bridge on Mohawk River, Little Falls, N.Y.

 File — Box: 5, Folder: 23
Scope and Contents

n.d. No. 6637 in the series, "Scenery at Little Falls. On the Mohawk, New York." Published by E. & H. T. Anthony & Co., 501 Broadway, N.Y. 17 x 8.5 cm.

Format: Stereoptic print.

Dates: 1842-2003

Item 1: Globe Woolen Mills, Utica, N.Y.

 File — Box: 5, Folder: 24
Scope and Contents

View of mill building with trees directly in front. 17.5 x 9 cm.

Format: Stereoptic print.

Dates: 1842-2003

Item 1: Saratoga Victory Mfg. Co., Victory Mills, N.Y.

 File — Box: 5, Folder: 25
Scope and Contents

n.d. View of trees and mill beyond. Scratched into image, "Victory, From old Gravel Bed". Photographed by C. H. Pease, Schuylerville, N.Y. 17.5 x 8.5 cm.

Format: Stereoptic print.

Dates: 1842-2003

Item 1: Cotton mills of Waterford, N.Y., 1867

 File — Box: 5, Folder: 26
Scope and Contents

D. A. Henry, Stereoscopic Views, Brattleboro, Vt. View of mills and city in the valley beyond. Written on front (ink) Waterford, near Troy, from Cohoes. 17.5 x 8.5 cm.

Format: Stereoptic print.

Dates: 1867

Item 1: Eagle Mills, Watertown, N.Y.

 File — Box: 5, Folder: 27
Scope and Contents

n.d. Exterior view of mills, horse drawn carriages and workers in front. 17.5 x 8.5 cm

Format: Stereoptic print.

Dates: 1842-2003

Item 1: No. 1. White Oak Cotton Mills, Greensboro, N.C., 1909

 File — Box: 5, Folder: 28
Scope and Contents H.C. White Co., N. Bennington, Vt. Gelatin silver print. No. 1 in a set of 25 stereocards. Text on reverse: "This plant, located just North of the City of Greensboro, N.C., is the largest denim mill in the world. It is owned by the Proximity Manufacturing Company, which also operates another large denim plant at Greensboro, known as Proximity Mill. The two plants have an aggregate of 110,000 spindles and 3500 looms, and employ about 2500 operatives. They consume 60,000 bales of cotton...
Dates: 1909

Item 2: No. 2. Opening machines, White Oak Cotton Mills, Greensboro, N.C., 1907

 File — Box: 5, Folder: 28
Scope and Contents H.C. White Co., N. Bennington, Vt. Gelatin silver print. No. 2 in a set of 25 stereocards. Text on reverse: "The bales are opened, and the cotton is thrown into the large hoppers at the front of these machines, which open and loosen the fibres, work out lumps and remove the grosser impurities, such as dirt, leaf, seed and trash. A strong air draft carries off the dust and foreign particles, and lifts the cotton through trunks to the floor above. There are twenty-four lines of Opening...
Dates: 1907

Item 3: No. 3. Lapper machines, White Oak Cotton Mills, Greensboro, N.C., 1909

 File — Box: 5, Folder: 28
Scope and Contents H.C. White Co., N. Bennington, Vt. Gelatin silver print. No. 3 in a set of 25 stereocards. Text on reverse: "In these machines, known as Breaker and Finisher Lappers, more of the trash and impurities is beaten out of the cotton, and the lint is carried forward and wound into rolls of cotton batting known as laps. Several of these are doubled and drawn into one so as to get the weight of each yard as uniform as possible." The White Oak Cotton Mills made denim. 17.75 x 8.75 cm....
Dates: 1909