This picture postcard card shows men working on railroad tracks in a railroad yard on the Barge Canal in Mehcanicsville, N.Y. Snow is on the ground with bare trees in the background and houses near the railroad tracks. (3M) is handwritten below...
Barge, being pulled by a tugboat barely visible in front, passing under the shadow of a railroad truss bridge. There is a woman in kerchief and long skirt at the tiller, viewed from the stern. The top right of the stern board is visible with the...
Front caption reads: "OSBURN HOUSE ROCHESTER, N.Y&View of GeneseeRiver." [bottom of card]; "South Avenue One Block From Main ST." [left side above caption on bottom of card]. Blank space around edges of card. A depiction of the Osburn House Hotel...
Blue sepia photograph of construction workers scattered throughout a construction site. A partially completed lock wall prominently featured. Debris is scattered at various points throughout the site, including lumber and steel. On the right...
View from west of the construction of the new Barge Canal lock 17 on the Mohawk River in Little Falls. The old canal can be seen on the south river bank and the entrance from the lock into the new river channel. The lock has a vertical lift gate. ...
Boulders; Buildings; Canal construction; Embankments; Grasses; Lumber; Roads; Rocks; Ropes; Sheds; Utility poles; People; Black & white postcards; Railroad tracks;
Black and white photograph of barge canal construction of Lock #14 at Canajoharie, N.Y. showing partially constructed lock with construction debris, railroad tracks and equipment in the foreground and railroad tracks in the background. Blank space...
In the foreground, several sailboats are traversing the Hudson River. In the middle distance appears a tugboat towing a barge, a ferry crossing the river, and what appears to be a moored line of barges. In the far distance a train chugs across the...
View of a harbor down the center from the perspective of the railroad bridge, with commercial buildings on the sides and a bridge that goes across the harobr directly in the center of the card; Printing information: OSWEGO, N.Y. - NO.5 [indicated...
Panoramic painting of rural countryside showing a river and a canal [presumably, the Erie Canal] merging. A suspension bridge spans the river. In the background, a railroad train runs along the river on the opposite bank from the viewer's vantage...
A color card of an Erie Canal [presumably] in a rural area near Herkimer, New York. The Erie Canal [presumably] runs diagonally across the postcard from the upper left side to the lower right. Railroad tracks [presumably], towpaths, utility poles...
Black & white picture of the Boonville train wreck of July 4, 1908. A northbound passenger train filled with [presumably] holiday excursionists, collided with a southbound freight train, carrying produce and general goods. There were six...
Bridges; Buildings; Canals; Railroad tracks; Trees; Utility Poles; Black & white postcards; Panoramic views
Panoramic view, black and white postcard of a canal located in Baldwinsville, N.Y. Railroad tracks are visible on the right side of postcard, while various structures, utility poles, and trees are visible on the left side. On one structure a...
Drawing looking north along Fourth Avenue (Park Avenue South) from between 31st and 32nd Streets, mid-1850's. At left, with the flag, is the Brandes Hotel and Restaurant; to its right, in the block now occupied by Two Park Avenue, are the ticket...
Grand Central Depot - 1870's. Grand Central Depot opened in 1871 for the New York and Harlem Railroad and the New Haven Railroad. Architect: John B. Snook in association with engineer Isaac C. Buckhout. Original glass and metal train shed...
Grand Central Depot, 1890. Grand Central Depot opened in 1871 for the New York and Harlem Railroad and the New Haven Railroad. Architect: John B. Snook in association with engineer Isaac C. Buckhout. Original glass and metal train shed designed...
Grand Central Depot, 1890. Grand Central Depot opened in 1871 for the New York and Harlem Railroad and the New Haven Railroad. Architect: John B. Snook in association with engineer Isaac C. Buckhout. Original glass and metal train shed designed...