Showing Records: 1 - 10 of 28740
$1, $2, $3, $4, $5
Folder 4
Arranged by denomination.
1) Golf Piping Rock 2) Washington, D.C. 3) Mount Vernon 4) Stockbridge 5) Greenwich "Alarm" 6) Tuxedo Golf, 1940 spring and summer
1) Greenwich (Ruth) 2) Elm Court 3) Brookhurst 4) Races Belmont 5) Good shots of N.Y.C. 6) Shooting with [N.A.?] New Car, Broadway at nite, 1940 fall
1) Palm Beach (my first film) 2) Flashy and Cincie 3) Weekend skiing in Vermont, 1940 Jan-Feb
1. The Misses Kingsbury, 1915
In 1915, the Litchfield Garden Club joined the Garden Clubs of America project to document member gardens with hand colored glass lantern slides for the Smithsonian Archives of American Gardens. Litchfield's club presented the Smithsonian with a copy, keeping the master slides in town.
1st list, Revolutionary soldiers listed by town, circa 1830s
Item 1
Listed names of Revolutionary War veterans who filed pension claims. Info incl. lists based on the town of the veteran. There is a signature of Phineas Miner (P. Miner, Conservator) from Winchester included at front of the top stack of pension claim lists.
1st Litchfield Artillery
2 packs of cards
Folder 1
Folder 1 contains 2 packs of cards. One pack of cards is a pack of inivitations whose artwork is by Hilary Knight, and the other pack is a pack of thank you cards that has "Merci" written on the front.
2. The Misses Kingsbury, 1915
In 1915, the Litchfield Garden Club joined the Garden Clubs of America project to document member gardens with hand colored glass lantern slides for the Smithsonian Archives of American Gardens. Litchfield's club presented the Smithsonian with a copy, keeping the master slides in town.
2nd Connecticut Heavy Artillery
The Litchfield Historical Society photograph collection is an artifical collection brought together by staff that contains photographs that primarily were part of the vertical files collection. They are arranged into three series by format: Series 1. Prints; Series 2. Daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, and tintypes; and Series 3. Glass plates. The content of the prints and glass plates are categorized in this finding aid by subject; the physical objects are arranged by accession.