Archives
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7644 results found. Records searched: 7644
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E2006.006.027 - Poster
a reproduction on antiqued parchment that looks and feels old;. of A poster of Patent Medicine Ad 1853; full page ad for bottle of cure-all. "Good for Toothaches...Corns...Cleaning Clothes
Record Type: Archive
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E2006.006.028 - Document
Articles of Confederation of the United States, 1778. Reproduced on antiqued parchment that looks and feels old.
Record Type: Archive
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E2006.006.029 - Document
First United States Patent Grant, July 31, 1790 to Samuel Hopkins. in a blue envelope. Reproduced on antique parchment that looks and feels authentically old.
Record Type: Archive
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E2006.008.001 - Booklet
A booklet called "Agricultural Almanac" for the year 1896. The almanac was printed and sold by John Baer's Sons, No. 15-17 North Queen Street, Lancaster, PA.
Record Type: Archive
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E2006.018.015 - Newspaper
Fitchburg Sentinel, Tues. Nov. 26, 1963, with the story of President moves to the White House. There is also a picture of John-John.
Record Type: Archive
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E2006.018.016 - Newspaper
Fitchburg Sentinel November 25, 1963, the funeral of John F. Kennedy
Record Type: Archive
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E2006.018.017 - Newspaper
The Boston Globe Special Report : The Clinton Impeachment" Sunday, December 20, 1998.
Record Type: Archive
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E2006.018.018 - Newspaper
Telegram & Gazette, October 18, 1989, Quake rocks San Francisco, causing death, destruction
Record Type: Archive
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E2006.018.019 - Newspaper
Sentinel & Enterprise 150th Anniversay Edition, Monday, September 19, 1988.
Record Type: Archive
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E2006.018.020 - Newspaper
Sentinel & Enterprise Weekend edition, Sat & Sun June 3-4, 1989. Killer wind storm rages, damaged steeple of the First Parish Unitarian Universalist Church
Record Type: Archive
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E2006.018.021 - Newspaper
Telegram & Gazette, Sat. June 3, 1989, Storm topples steeples, kills Fitchburg woman
Record Type: Archive
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E2007.002.001 - Record, Phonograph
A recording as part of Adventures in Negro History on the Frederick Douglass Years 1817-1895. On the back of the slipcase is a commentary by John Hope Franklin on "What the Douglass Years mean to America."
Record Type: Archive
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E2007.003.001 - Booklet
"Tea is Brewing"; a guide for teachers; a history resource and curriculum book from the Old South Meeting House, a Museum and Historic Site on Boston's Freedom Trail; an education program where students experience firsthand the events that led up to the Boston Tea Party
Record Type: Archive
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E2007.005.001 - manuscript
Facts and traditions in the life of Eli Longley and the age in which he lived. He was the grandfather of the writer, Mary Grace (Sawyer) Walker. He was born in Bolton, Massachusetts Dec. 13, 1762. Takes him throught the Revolutionary War period, Pioneer days in Waterford. He built the first hotel and store and was the first postmaster of Waterford. Account of Temperance reforms/ a section on Noted and Professional Men, including ministers, doct...
Record Type: Archive
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E2007.006.001 - Booklet
Life as a Colonist, a teacher resource Book for Middle and Upper Grades, McGraw-Hill Children's Publishing. Life as a Colonist provides clear information about the colonial age that allows students to parallel their lives with the lives of colonist. The ten chapters include reproducible worksheet. Topics include home, food, family, women, children, education, health, recreation, crime and punishment, and crafts.
Record Type: Archive
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E2007.006.002 - Pamphlet
Flash charts of Thirteen Colonies; In the 1600s, tens of thousands of people sailed across the Atlantic Ocean to a new land. Most, but no all, were English. Many sought religious freedom. They established settlements called colonies that were owned and controlled by countries back in Europe. By 1664, England owned the huge piece of land stretching from the Maine woods to South Carolina rice fields. The land was eventually divided into 12 colonie...
Record Type: Archive
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E2007.006.003 - Pamphlet
Flash charts of the Revolutionary War. The United States began as a group of 13 British colonies. Englishmen settled the first of these, Virginia, in 1607. More than 15 years later, many colonists felt that the British government was treating them unfairly. the colonists couldn't vote, even though the British collected taxes from them and passed laws they felt were unjust. Some leaders decided they should form their own, separate nation. Soo...
Record Type: Archive
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E2007.006.004 - Book
Paperback: Soldier's Heart by Gary Paulsen. Being a story of the Enlistment and Due Service of the Boy Charles Goddard in the First Minnesota Volunteers
Record Type: Archive
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E2007.006.011 - Newspaper
Copy of New York Tribune, N.Y. June 29, 1863; The Battle-field around Gettysburg , a compilation of articles about the war
Record Type: Archive
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E2007.006.012 - Newspaper
Gettysburg Star and Sentinel, Gettysburg, Pa., July, 1863. Stories of Civil War battles.
Record Type: Archive