Browse Items (50 total)
- Tags: lithographs
Sort by:
Bird’s Eye View, Centennial Buildings, 1876
The Centennial Exposition was held in Philadelphia from May 10 to November 10, 1876. Organized to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, the event featured more than 200 buildings spread over 450 acres in…
Brandonville
Located about twelve miles southwest of Hazelton, Brandonville was laid out in 1864 by Nelson Brandon on land that he owned in East Union Township. The trains shown moving in either direction run on the Catawissa Valley Railroad, which extended from…
Catasauqua, Pa.
This representation of Catasauqua, in 1873 already a fairly substantial town located on the Lehigh River just east of Allentown, provides the perfect model for demonstrating the often complicated history behind the production of bird's-eye views. For…
Tags: aerial views, Catasauqua, landscapes, lithographs, Pennsylvania, prints, rivers, towns, United States
Clearfield
Clearfield was named after the numerous open fields, thought to have been cleared by bison that once roamed western Pennsylvania, that were discovered where what today is known as Clearfield Creek flows into the West Branch of the Susquehanna River.…
Columbia
This picturesque town on the Susquehanna River, located about halfway between Harrisburg and the Pennsylvania state line, was almost the nation's capital.
In 1730, John Wright, an evangelical Quaker who had settled in the area to preach to the…
In 1730, John Wright, an evangelical Quaker who had settled in the area to preach to the…
Easton Pa. in 1876
Easton, the county seat of Northampton County, was founded in 1750 and incorporated as a borough in 1789. The city was named after Easton Neston, in Northamptonshire, England, the estate owned by Thomas Penn’s father-in-law, George Fermor, 2nd Earl…
Tags: bridges, lithographs, Pennsylvania, prints, towns, United States
Explosion of the Alfred Thomas at Easton Pa. March 6th 1860
The Alfred Thomas, a ninety-foot steamer, was constructed in Easton in 1859 to navigate the Delaware River between Easton and Port Jervis, New York, transporting produce and passengers. On March 6, 1860, the ship steamed up river with about forty…
Tags: Delaware River, lithographs, Pennsylvania, prints, rivers, United States
Falls on the Lackawana, Pa.
From the series North American Scenery
The views were issued, four at a time, in seven monthly installments beginning in January 1846, together with explanatory texts for each of the scenes by the well-known New York bibliophile John…
The views were issued, four at a time, in seven monthly installments beginning in January 1846, together with explanatory texts for each of the scenes by the well-known New York bibliophile John…
Tags: lithographs, Pennsylvania, prints, rivers, United States
Felis Concolor
Plate 96 from The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America
Not long after publishing the final volume of his monumental The Birds of America in 1838, John James Audubon began the production of The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America in collaboration…
Tags: lithographs, mountain lions, prints, Puma concolor
Furnace Grounds of Jacob Black and Sons
While the maker and publisher of this lithograph remain a mystery, we do know something about its subject. Jacob Black was one of the most successful iron masters in Clarion County. In 1833, he built a furnace a few miles southeast of Shippenville…