Five white men sitting in front of a building, two on chairs, three, opposite them, on benches. Two are toasting, while another is holding a bottle, about to pour. Town identified as La Chapelle on caption.
A group of women and men gathered in front of a stone church, talking in groups. Two houses stand on the left with a horse and wagon near the entrance of one.
A woman and a man carrying large sacks on their backs and holding hands walk away from the camera down a road with flowers and trees lining it on both sides.
Two white boys holding long poles look at an older woman who stands in front of them by the corner of a wooden house. Caption: "Informing their Aunt Jane that they want to go fishing."
A two story Federal style building with an entry porch and a smaller side building behind a picket fence. A number of trees grow in the yard and nearer the camera.
Image of three children in front of building doorway, hands on a rope, ringing bell not shown. All dressed in spring attire, short sleeves and light weight pants.
Edward Hitchcock described Mount Pollux, and its twin, Mount Castor, as a "small, rounded eminence, which is cleared and opens from its top one of the most lovely panoramas which nature has formed. All around…
A view of a stone obelisk rising above some low trees with a house partly visible beside it. Trees grow across the middle ground and a dirt path extends away from the camera and turns right towards the monument. A mountain is faintly visible in the…
Side and back of a barn. "Besse Mills & Co. Clothiers and Hatters Dwight St. Holyoke" painted on the side. The spire of the First Congregational Church visible behind the barn.
This house was located on the north corner of College Street and Boltwood Avenue, and was purchased by the fraternity in 1886. It was demolished in 1914 to make way for the new Beta Theta Pi house. This chapter of the fraternity was the outgrowth of…
View of the Amherst College Beta Theta Pi fraternity house. It stood on the corner of Maple Avenue (now Boltwood Avenue) and College Street. It was demolished in 1914 to make way for the new Beta Theta Pi house.