Louisa May Alcott headshot
Louisa May Alcott (writter)
Andrew Carnegie with his wife Louise Whitfield Carnegie and their daughter
Andrew Carnegie with African-American leader Booker T. Washington (front row, center)
Andrew Carnegie, age 16, with younger brother Thomas
Laura Ingalls and Almanzo Wilder
C. J. Walker Manufacturing Company
Madam C.J. Walker, the first self-made U.S. woman millionaire of any race
George Washington Carver (front row, center) poses with fellow faculty of Tuskegee Institute
Unveiling of the Equestrian Statue of Robert E. Lee
General Lee and his Confederate officers in their first meeting
Robert E. Lee, around age 38, and his son William Henry Fitzhugh Lee
Robert Frost's 85th birthday
John D. Rockefeller aged 18
Du Bois organized the Silent Parade to protest the East St. Louis riots.
Large crowd looking at the burned body of Jesse Washington, 18 year-old African American, lynched
Wyatt and Josephine Earp in their mining camp
Wyatt Earp's Northern Saloon
Wyatt Earp billed his Dexter Saloon in Nome as "the only second class saloon in Alaska".
The Dexter Saloon at left was owned by Wyatt Earp and his partner Charles E. Hoxie
about two blocks wide and five miles long
The Earps rented this cabin
The "Dodge City Peace Commission"
Photographed by C. S. Fly
Deputies Bat Masterson (standing) and Wyatt Earp
Interior of the Long Branch Saloon
Wyatt dealt faro at the Long Branch Saloon
Wyatt Earp and mother Virginia Ann Cooksey Earp
Barnum with Commodore Nutt, photograph by Charles DeForest Fredricks
Houdini and Jennie, the Vanishing Elephant
Harry Houdini before he jumped off the Harvard Bridge