Taken in the spring or summer when the trees are fully leafed out, the photograph is shot down a street with trees growing on either side. There is a house to the right which seems to be the main focus of the picture, although it is not identified.
The entrance to the church is decorated with banners in German, crosses, flags, and ribbons. It is identified on another photo as St. Boniface at St. Mary's.
The entrance to the church is decorated with banners in German, crosses, flags, and ribbons. It is identified on the back as St. Boniface at St. Mary's.
The photograph shows a building that has been gutted and its upper stories destroyed, likely by fire. The words still readable on the building include "men's furnishing" "Jones'" "overalls and "duck." It could have been the Jones Bros Garment Co.,…
The entrance to the church is decorated with banners in German, crosses, flags, and ribbons. Underneath are young boys, approximately thirty. They are identified on the back as St. Mary's St. Boniface Society.
The entrance to the church is decorated with banners in German, crosses, flags, and ribbons. It is identified on another photo as St. Boniface at St. Mary's.
Two girls and other men stand on the street in front of a gutted building. There are stacks of lumber and all around. The sign in the surviving building says "H Sussmann, Bakery, Open Monday." According to the 1913 City Directory, the Henry Sussmann…