North College was one of the first buildings constructed in 1867 as housing for students attending the Massachusetts Agricultural College. It stood until about 1957 when it was razed for the construction of new college buildings.
View of the building that was originally called Middle College until the original North College burned in 1857. Built by Hiram Johnson, an Amherst brick mason.
A man sits by a pair of grand stone columns on the left end of a bridge. Conecticut River flows in the middle ground and a tree-lined street stretches out on the left along the river with some cars driving on it.Foreground road has trolley tracks in…
View south on South Pleasant Street with a prominent view of Kellogg's Block showing the driveway to Stebbins' Livery Stable. Men are leaning out third-story windows, a clock is visible outside J. A. Rawson, and a sign for Amherst Dental Rooms hangs…
A downhill road leads into the village. A stone wall on the right foreground, a church in the middleground on the right and a couple of houses stand in the middleground on the left. A large tree obscures some houses in the background.
A dirt road extending away from the camera entering thick and dark woods in the middleground. A fence separates the road from a river on the left with hills visible on the left.