Browse Items (120 total)
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Johanna Gunter with children, n.d.
Photograph of Johanna Gunter with children in a field taken by Paul Gunter. The photo combines Paul Gunter's skill for naturalism and art photography with his experience with studio portraiture. -
Gunter family on a row boat, n.d.
Paul Gunter and family on a rowboat at Harrod's Creek. -
1313 Mossrose Ave, ca. 1910
Photograph of home at 1313 Mossrose Ave ca. 1913. -
Photograph of Christmas Tree at Gunter family residence, ca. 1900
A photograph of a Christmas Tree at the Gunter family residence on Mellwood Ave, ca. 1900. -
Photograph of Hermann, Erna, Ralph, and Johanna Gunter, 1913
A photograph of the Gunter family having tea outside. -
Enid with Birthday Beasts and The Pioneer, 1926
Enid Bland Yandell poses in her Red Cross uniform holding one of her Birthday Beasts (also known as Wind in the Willows, 1926). Her small plaster titled The Pioneer (also known as Daniel Boone, 1924) plus one more beast sits on the table. Small, table sculptures were popular during the late 19th and early 20th century due to the rise of middle class incomes. -
Laying the Cornerstone, ca. 1903
A group gathers to lay the cornerstone of the original Jewish Hospital. -
Original Board of Directors and Rabbis, ca. 1905
Photograph of the original board of directors and rabbis who oversaw the dedication and creation of Jewish Hospital.
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Portrait of Patty Smith Hill, 1905
Patty Smith Hill, together with fellow educator Anna Bryan (1858-1901), worked in Louisville to modernize the traditionalist kindergarten system and bring Friedrich Froebel's vision to American kindergarteners. Between 1890 and 1905, over 3,000 visitors across the nation came to Louisville to learn about their methods and subjects of teching. In 1893, Hill was named the Director of the LFKA, a role in which she further developed the Teachers College and successfully advocated for the incorporation of kindergartens into the Louisville Public School System. In 1905, Hill was appointed to the faculty of Columbia University Teachers College, where she taught for over 30 years. Hill published dozens of articles, wrote children's books, and invented "Patty Hill blocks" that are still used in kindergarten classrooms today. -
1923 Kentucky Derby Grandstand
Photograph from Mary Elizabeth Theobald's scrapbook of the 1923 Kentucky Derby Grandstand. -
1923 Derby Memorabilia
Scrapbook page featuring souvenirs and memorabilia from the 1923 Kentucky Derby. Items on the page include a jockey on the horse, a general admission ticket, a ticket to the grandstand, and an image of the winning horse with roses from the Kentucky Derby (possibly Zev). -
1923 Derby Scrapbook page
Close-up of a photo on a scrapbook page created by Mary Elizabeth Theobald. The image is of the winning horse and jockey. -
Julius Friedman and Nathan Felde
This photograph of Freidman and Felde served as the frontispiece for the 1980 book Public Works: The Posters of Nathan Felde and Julius Friedman, which documented the creative output of their design firm Images. This personal copy bears photographer Alex Traube’s inscription “For my friend, Julius Friedman.” -
Service Club
Construction of Camp Zachary Taylor, possibly the Service Club. -
Flooded Portland
Aerial view of flooded Portland, the West End of Louisville, and eastern New Albany, Indiana with the K&I Bridge in the distance, 1937 Flood. -
Flood damage in Indiana
Flood damage across the Ohio River in Indiana, 1937. Groups of people are entering boats from a large building on the far side of the street to travel on the flooded roadway. Boats range in size from rowboats to schooners. There is a flooded, abandoned trailer on the opposite side of the street. Multiple trees are submerged. -
The "Point"
Damaged houses at The "Point," Louisville, KY, 1937 Flood. Housing materials are mostly wood and roofing tiles. A detached roof with gable is on the ground. -
Derby hats
Kentucky Derby hats are a long-standing tradition started by women; however men have taken part in the tradition as well over the years. For well-to-do late 19th and early 20th century women, Derby day was an opportunity to be seen in the latest fashions. -
Derby Festival Parade
Originating in 1956 on a budget of only $640, the annual Pegasus Parade is the Kentucky Derby Festival's oldest event. This photograph shows a U. S. Army Armor Center parade float, ca. 1960s. -
Derby Day crowds
View of crowds at Churchill Downs, ca. 1930s. People in hats are walking around, and many parked cars are in the background.