Two men wearing butchers’ smocks stand in the Armour and Company Meat Locker at 298 Iowa Street. The man at left, wearing a straw hat, is the manager, Arthur H. Sigmann (or Sigman). The number “103” has been written on the emulsion side of the…
Anna Schumacher (Emily Hoffmann's mother and the photographer's grandmother), on the left, and Mrs. Nickols, (Albert D. Hoffman's grandmother and the photographer's great grandmother), on the right, are standing and facing the photographer. Anna is…
The houses of a town are barely left standing, with extensive damage shown in their collapsed walls and roofs. The church steeple is still standing. The photo is marked as U.S. Official and has the Signal Corps logo, 35458.
Two men, one of whom is probably the photographer’s son Le Roy are pictured standing in an intersection of two passages in a cave. The number 2205 is written on a label that has been stuck to the lower left corner of the slide.
A tour boat filled with vacationers is moving across the lake. Flags are flying in the breeze. The photographer’s notes indicate that this image was taken in 1925.
Soldiers, a truck, and several horse-and-carriages are on the street in front of a large white building. Written on it is "J. Theisens Hotel, Hotel zer(?) Post, Hotel zok Post". The photo is marked U.S. Official and has the Signal Corps logo, 39627.…
This is a round photograph that shows Albert D. Hoffmann, Kittie Tilc[h]es, and Emily Hoffmann standing on a wall of a possible old building. There is a hill behind them that is fenced in. The two women are wearing lighter colored dresses and have…