View of Chase's Block on the corner of Amity and North Pleasant Streets. The view includes a parked wagon with a picnic basket beside it, and a baby carriage on the porch in front of the tailoring shop of Henry O. Pease. Other shops in the building…
Charlie Johnson listening to Mr. Shumway. A wooden horse-drawn wagon is seen in the foreground. Fields dominate the middleground and town buildings are seen in the background.
Two boys, identified as Stephen and Charlie Johnson, playing on the swinging gate of the yard of Clifton Johnson's barn. Stephen is climbing up the gate while Charlie is holding it.
Two boys, identified as Stephen and Charles Johnson, stand by a grinding wheel next to a wheelbarrow in front of a rustic old barn without doors. Piles of firewood line both sides of the entrance.
Charles R. Green stands on the front steps of the Jones Library shaking hands with another man. Beside him is the chalkboard advertising one of his Sunday at 5:00 programs.
Two boys, identified as Stephen and Charlie Johnson, sons of Roger Johnson in the doorway of a barn, looking at each other. Stephen is leaning against the doorway and Charles is sitting on a wheelbarrow.
Two boys, identified as Stephen and Charlie Johnson, sons of Roger Johnson in the doorway of a barn. Stephen is leaning against the doorway and Charles is sitting on a wheelbarrow. Both are looking at the camera.
Charles Green, Paul Harris, and Ray Stannard Baker stand in front of the Jones Library in 1935. A placard listing upcoming events is partially visible behind Baker.
A man, identified as Charles Dudley Warner, dressed in a three-piece suit, wearing a bowler hat, and holding a walking stick, stands on the steps of a porch to his home looking off to the left. Some bare trees grow on the left, in front of the house.
An older, bearded man, identified as Charles Dudley Warner, sitting at a round table reading a book. Behind him are bookshelves with sets of and individual books along with decorative accessories and pictures in front of lattice windows.
Local author Charles Derby poses with copies of his books, Inspired by Dreams: Selections from the Charles Derby Collection and Eye of the Angel: Selections from the Derby Collection.