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View of Harrisburg, Pa.
Printed by E. Jones & G. W. Newman, New York
From the series North American Scenery
This view of Harrisburg, together with the depiction of waterfalls on the Lackawanna River (86.613) are three of the twenty-eight locations in Pennsylvania,…
From the series North American Scenery
This view of Harrisburg, together with the depiction of waterfalls on the Lackawanna River (86.613) are three of the twenty-eight locations in Pennsylvania,…
Tags: bridges, cities, Harrisburg, lithographs, Pennsylvania, prints, United States
Philadelphia from Belmont
From volume II of Picturesque America
In June 1872, the publishing firm D. Appleton and Company sent its agents out across the country to solicit subscriptions for its ambitious Picturesque America. Already under production for several years, the…
In June 1872, the publishing firm D. Appleton and Company sent its agents out across the country to solicit subscriptions for its ambitious Picturesque America. Already under production for several years, the…
Tags: bridges, cities, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, prints, rivers, United States
Le Cougar de Pensilvanie
Plate 41 from George-Louis Leclerc de Buffon, Histoire naturelle, générale et párticulière, supplément, tome III
The mountain lion of Pennsylvania, mascot of Penn State since 1908, has many names: puma, deer tiger, panther, cougar, and…
Tags: mountain lions, prints
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
View of the Burning of the Cumberland Valley Rail Road Bridge at Harrisburg, Decr. 4th, 1844
Although chartered in 1831, the Cumberland Valley Railroad Company didn’t complete its first span of track, between White Hill (just west of Harrisburg) and Carlisle, until August 1837. Service was extended further south to Chambersburg later that…
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
Pennsylvania State College
This early view of Penn State, drawn by W. W. Denslow and set onto stone by Maurice Traubel, features the original 1863 “Main Building” just four years after the school’s name was changed from the Agricultural College of Pennsylvania to the…
The University at Lewisburg, Pa.
Founded in 1846, the University at Lewisburg remained under its original title only for a few decades. In 1886, the board of trustees voted to change the name to Bucknell University, in honor of William Bucknell, one of the founders of the school…
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…