-
Jacob photo for bio
-
[Untitled]
-
Abigale Mumby Bio Portrait Portrait for site creator biography
-
Couple on Lincoln Peak near Lake Ellen Wilson Bob and Dorothy McClelland rest on Lincoln Peak near Lake Ellen Wilson in Glacier National Park, Montana.
-
Girls camping at Two Medicine campground Girls camping at Two Medicine campground.
-
Hikers lunching along Waterton River on US end of Waterton Lake Two hikers sit together on rocks next to the Waterton River holding white boxes labeled "Glacier Park Company" and "Trail Lunch."
-
Descending the snowy tops Mountain climber Dorothy Pilley descending a slope with an ice pick.
-
13 women passengers in and around a tour bus at the Hudson Bay Divide 13 women passengers in and around a tour bus at the Hudson Bay Divide. On the back of the photo, the tour bus driver, Ector Bossati, wrote, "One of my bus loads!"
-
Hiker at BM4 Hiker at BM4.
-
At the Window A lone hiker stands at the slickrock edge at the base of The Window.
-
THE SPANISH COLONIAL ARCHITECTURE
OF PECOS PUEBLO, NEW MEXICO: Archaeological Excavations and Architectural History
of the Spanish Colonial Churches and Related Buildings
at Pecos National Historical Park,
1617-1995 A professional paper examining the archeological history of Pecos National Historical Park.
-
Mesa Verde's Ranger Uniform Uniformed staff at Mesa Verde National Park. Front row, from left to right (last names only): Morehead; Riley; Ross; Pinkley; Rose; Ptolmey; Assistant Park Naturalist Watson; Chief Ranger Faha. Back row, from left to right: Superintendent McLaughlin; Guillet; Withers; Taylor; Fluckey; Smiley; Attane; Sutherland; Assistant Superintendent Williams. Pinkley wears the NPS uniform shirt and tie with the approved skirt option. The men wear the NPS uniform with breeches and boots. Appeared in National Park Service Bulletin, July/August 1941, page 22.
-
Forbes: "Burt's Bees Cofounder On Why She Gave Away 87,000 Acres In Maine" A Forbes article describes Roxanne Quimby's business and conservation activities and donation of the land to form Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument. Article includes related images.
-
Roxanne Quimby Roxanne Quimby is pictured while donating 100 acres of land on Mount Desert Island to Acadia National Park for the occasion of the park's centennial.
-
ABC News article: "735 acres of ancestral land returned to Penobscot Nation" An article from ABC News describes the return of 735 acres of ancestral lands to the Penobscot Nation. The land had been owned by the Elliotsville Foundation, Roxanne Quimby's land trust which also donated the federal lands to form Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument. Quimby's family describes their land donations as part of a reparations process and restoration of ancestral Wabanaki lands.
-
Two Nudes in a Forest (The Earth Itself) Two lovers are shown in an intimate scene
Allegedly a gift to her girlfriend the actress Dolores del Rio
-
Niankhkhnum and Khnumhotep Tomb of two royal Egyptian servants pictured in an intimate embrace.
-
Passion of the Cut Sleeve Chinese Emperor Ai (漢哀帝) and his lover Dong Xian (董賢)
-
[Untitled]
-
Passion of the Cut Sleeve
-
Passion of the Cut Sleeve
Depiction of Emperor Ai of Han and his lover Dong Xian.
-
Annual Report: Neighborhood Rehabilitation and Improvement Committee This report created by the Rehabilitation and Improvement Committee of the North Central Area documents housing policies that were enforced within the neighborhood during the first year of the committee’s existence. As it seems the report may have been delivered to Ann Arbor’s City Council as an update (see the use of “Council” on page 1), it is important to note both the actions described in the report and how they are conveyed. Buildings are rarely, if ever, mentioned in the context of those residing or working in them, save for those whose residents received marks of compliance from the committee. Rather, homes and businesses are often reduced to structures that are “sub-standard” (page 1) or an “eye sore” (page 2) - a change of language that lenses actions to destroy them or gut them as benevolent and necessary.
-
Urban Renewal: A Factual Report Prepared by Ann Arbor’s City Council with funding from the federal Urban Renewal Survey and Planning Advance, this document describes the potential redevelopment of the North Central area of the city. As is made clear through maps, proposed housing policies, and a lot-by-lot breakdown of envisioned governmental intervention, the plan of Ann Arbor officials was to exert control over a neighborhood which housed the majority of the city’s Black residents. Of particular note is the government’s preparations for seizing the land of any residents who do not comply with the city’s codes, rendering any objection to urban renewal as grounds for losing one’s property.
-
4 Mile March Protest - Protester With Sign "Mayor Opposes Fair Housing" This photo for the Ann Arbor News portrays a demonstration along Summit St in the Northeast Central area of the city (4 Mile March Protest - Protester With Sign “Mayor Opposes Fair Housing,” n.d.). The action was organized to protest the support by city government - specifically Mayor Cecil O. Creal - for a weakened fair housing ordinance. The community members in this photo carry picket signs pointing out the government’s hypocrisy in investing in a plan, but only one that would be unactionable.
-
Sit-In Demonstration "Illegal" But City Takes No Action Yet This article describes a demonstration sponsored by the Ann Arbor Fair Housing Association - CORE in response to City Council’s support for a weakened fair housing ordinance at the end of July 1963. The protest mentioned was part of a larger summer of civic action to get the City Council to invest fully in the idea of a fair housing ordinance.