Browse Items (265 total)
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African-Americans at Louisville, Kentucky's District Office
An unidentified group of African-American men and women standing on the steps in front of home office of Maammoth Life and Accident Insurance Company.Tags District Office -
Louisville District Office, Mammoth Life & Accident Insurance Company, 1965
Front view of the Louisville district office on 38th & Broadway.
Please note that the Filson Historical Society does not have insurance policy records for Mammoth Life. Requests for their insurance policy records should be made to Kemper Life Insurance Company at 1-800-777-8467. -
Director Agnes H. Glover
A photograph of Agnes H. Glover, who served as director of Mammoth Life & Accident Insurance Company.
Please note that the Filson Historical Society does not have insurance policy records for Mammoth Life. Requests for their insurance policy records should be made to Kemper Life Insurance Company at 1-800-777-8467. -
Group of Mammoth Life & Accident Insurance, Co employees in Detroit, 1978
An unidentified group of African American men and women in an office in Detroit, Michigan.
Please note that the Filson Historical Society does not have insurance policy records for Mammoth Life. Requests for their insurance policy records should be made to Kemper Life Insurance Company at 1-800-777-8467. -
Group photo at Mammoth Life & Accident Insurance, Co Louisville office, January 23, 1967
A group of unidentified African-American men posing in front of two signs, one of which reads the "Sales Commission Success Formula."
Please note that the Filson Historical Society does not have insurance policy records for Mammoth Life. Requests for their insurance policy records should be made to Kemper Life Insurance Company at 1-800-777-8467. -
Julius Price, Sr. surrounded by Boy Scouts and Cub Scouts
Julius Price, Sr., president of Mammoth Life and Accident Insurance Company, surrounded by three African-American Boy Scouts and two African-American Cub Scouts from the Shawnee District in Louisville, Kentucky.
Please note that the Filson Historical Society does not have insurance policy records for Mammoth Life. Requests for their insurance policy records should be made to Kemper Life Insurance Company at 1-800-777-8467. -
Office workers at the Mammoth Life & Accident Insurance, Co, 1965
Four unidentified African-American women working at typewriters at the Mammoth Life & Accident Insurance Company office. The inscription on the back reads, "Computer Din."
Please note that the Filson Historical Society does not have insurance policy records for Mammoth Life. Requests for their insurance policy records should be made to Kemper Life Insurance Company at 1-800-777-8467.Tags Women -
Mammoth Life & Accident Insurance, Co. employees attending "Secretaries Week," 1964
Three unidentified African-American women sitting on a couch for "Secretaries Week."
Please note that the Filson Historical Society does not have insurance policy records for Mammoth Life. Requests for their insurance policy records should be made to Kemper Life Insurance Company at 1-800-777-8467.Tags Women -
Switchboard operator at Mammoth Life & Accident Insurance, Company, n.d.
An unidentified African American woman operating a switchboard.
Please note that the Filson Historical Society does not have insurance policy records for Mammoth Life. Requests for their insurance policy records should be made to Kemper Life Insurance Company at 1-800-777-8467.Tags Women -
Jane Hankins giving a speech, undated
Jane Hankins, wife of Mammoth Life & Accident Insurance president Junius E. Hankins, gives a speech at an undated event. Junius E. Hankins is sitting and watching the speech, and an unidentified African American woman stands behind the podium.
Please note that the Filson Historical Society does not have insurance policy records for Mammoth Life. Requests for their insurance policy records should be made to Kemper Life Insurance Company at 1-800-777-8467. -
The Cabbage Patch, showing Home of Mrs. Wiggs
This is likely a promotional postcard created after the publication of Alice Hegan Rice’s Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch, depicting the fictional mother’s home in this rural-industrial neighborhood. -
Kirkpatrick
Aged 5 yrs. Property of E. S. Washington and A. D. Offutt Fayette Co., Ky. A prize cattle specimen c. 1850s. -
Service Club
Construction of Camp Zachary Taylor, possibly the Service Club. -
Belle of Louisville vs. Delta Queen, ca. 1968
The Belle of Louisville in a race with the Delta Queen, ca. 1968. Louisville, Ky. -
Delta Queen vs. Belle of Louisville, February 1968
"The first steamboat race in more than 30 years will line the banks of the Ohio River near Louisville with spectators April 30 when the Delta Queen and the Belle of Louisville vie as a feature of the Kentucky Derby Festival," February 1968. -
Inside the cabin of the Robert E. Lee, n.d.
Interior cabin of the Robert E. Lee. The Robert E. Lee, nicknamed the "Monarch of the Mississippi," was built in New Albany, Indiana, in 1866. The hull was designed by DeWitt Hill, and the boat cost more than $200,000 to build. -
Steamer "America," June 26, 1920
Employees of C. Lee Cook Manufacturing Company aboard steamer America for a picnic at Fern Grove, June 26, 1920. -
The Alice Dean, ca. 1863
Memphis and Cincinnati Packet Alice Dean which had a capacity of 411 tons, was a side-wheel, wooden-hulled packet steamer. It was launched from Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1863, running a scheduled route between Cincinnati and Memphis, Tennessee. -
United States Steamer "Lexington," ca. 1861
U. S. steamer Lexington, labeled "United States Steamer Lexington" at the base of the drawing, which is signed "F. Muller," image from the Herald-Post. -
Steamboat Tarascon
The steamboat Tarascon was built in 1863 for the Louisville and Henderson Mail Line. It was used in service during the Civil War.