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This is the first page of Matthew from the New Testament translated into Algonquian. It was translated in 1661.
Headpiece designed for a Power of Attorney authorizing collectors of donations to the Foundling Hospital; Thomas Coram receiving a baby from a weeping mother, beside whom a dagger lies on the ground, and, on the left, uniformed children emerging from…
This image depicts the statue of a freed slave as his shackles are released and he holds aloft his letter of manumission.
An argument attributed to Daniel Defoe that proposes the building of a foundling hospital to mitigate the problems of over population in the eighteenth century.
The Grand Canon of the Colorado, near the mouth of Kanab Creek. The river has here cut its channel about 3,500 feet below the general level of the country. (F.64.) Expedition of 1872. Photographed by William Bell
The poem "The Grumbling Hive" by Bernard Mandeville 1705
A black and white photograph of Johana Harris's hands poised to play on a piano.
A photograph showing garlic grown at the Student Organic Farm drying
A description of the book, The Haven of Health, written by the author.
History of Episcopal Church in Utah from 1867 to 1930 with reports and statistics compiled by Sara Napper.
The History of the Utah-Idaho Farmer's Union by Jesse Tuttle.
An image of the Charles Steen home in Moab, Utah during the uranium boom.
Image of the house next door to the synagogue at 2760 Grant Avenue, which was purchased by the synagogue in 2013 to accommodate community gatherings and religious teachings, May 2021.
The International Committee for the Promotion of Chinese Industrial Cooperatives paper explaining the Gung Ho movement in China. Material available at the Helen Foster Snow Symposium at Brigham Young University, October 26-27, 2000.
The beginning of Aye Win's interview with Chit Moe translating in their apartment on May 18, 2015.
Kahsay Berhe Gebremedhin sits in the center of the picture. He doesn't appear to be talking but from the way Magen Olsen and Berhane Debesai Abraha are looking at him, it appears he may have recently finished or is about to start. The last two are in…
Black and white photograph of Dr. Robert D. Smith shaking hands with the last patient to leave Bushnell General Hospital. Photo is taken outside building 15.
Etching of a well-dressed woman approaching a chimney-sweep sitting in a doorway crying (left), while a baker's boy (right) watches. The Foundling Hospital is featured in the background.
A photo, taken by Howard Christenson, Chairman of the Providence Historic Preservation Commission, of the logo of the U.I.C. as seen on the floor of the Mendon Station.
This is a painting by Har Be Bar called the Lonely Rose. It hangs on the wall in her living room. It is a painting of a red rose and a hand and it has burmese writing on it with the title.
According to the Library of Congress: "A satire touching on some of the major issues in Connecticut politics on the eve of the ratification of the U.S. Constitution. The two rival factions shown are the "Federals," who represented the trading…
This pamphlet, produced by the Rotary Club of Tokyo, attempts to justify and explain Japan's invasion of Manchuria to the world's Rotarians.
The Mondragon Worker Cooperatives: An example of successful community economic development by Gary B. Hansen and Andres Hidalgo, July 1987.
The flyer describes the history and meaning behind the tile mosaic mural located in the Biology and Natural Resources building (built 1962) on the Utah State University Campus.
Cover image for The Multi-Purpose Camel: Interdisciplinary Studies on Pastoral Production in Somalia edited by Anders Hjort af Ornas
The National Outdoor Leadership School catalog, front cover, undated
This pamphlet produced by the Forestry Alumni Association describes the student and faculty need for a new Forestry Building. Prior to the construction the Biology and Natural Resources Building, the School of Forestry occupied the University Annex,…
The New York Clothing Store ad in The Ogden Standard, October 13, 1919.
Broadside featuring poetry by Kuweka Amiri Mwandishe and art by Talita Long. Proceeds went to support the Free Angela Davis Defense Fund.