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This document is an early Ogden City liquor license that has been modified into a brewers license. This license allowed the Becker Brewing and Malting Company to brew beer legally for a period of three months.
Stereoview photograph of the Union Pacific Railroad celebration at the 100th meridian in October 1866. #219 in its collection. Features UPRR executives and several train cars. Captions: Union Pacific Rail Road, Excursion to the 100th Meridian,…
Mezzotint of Henry Scott, 3rd Duke of Buccleuch with his dog
This poster is an advertisement against food waste during WWI. It says "Food is ammunition- don't waste it."
Translated title page of the Algonquian Bible. It was translated by John Eliot.
This is the first page of Matthew from the New Testament translated into Algonquian. It was translated in 1661.
An image depicting Wolfsbane, an incredibly deadly plant that grows throughout Europe.
Scan of wooden block created picture of white lavender from Gerard's Herbal 2nd Edition
This is an image from Gerard of a type of moss that can apparently grow on human bone.
This is a page from Gerard's Herbal. It is page 338 found in Volume I. It gives an example of the style of images used in the book.
This is a page from Gerard's Herbal showing the Tornefole, or the trefoil, plant.
The full page of wheat from Gerards Herbal showing both flat and double eared variants. Also includes the natures and some of the plants uses.
A close up image of the wood block prints showing two different types of ears of wheat.
A close up image of the woodblock print showing Turkie Corne. Turkie Corne is what Europeans of the time called Maize from the Americas.
Turky Wheat is a variant of Turkie Corne or Maize as we know it. It shows the smaller ear size in this close up of the image.
An image showing foxgloves, a dangerous plant that when used properly has many medicinal purposes.
A depiction of deadly nightshade, a plant that leads victims to death through deep sleep.
Full page scan of Turkie Corne from Gerards Herbal done at Utah State University.
The Intermountain Inter-Tribal School logo created by Navajo artist John Huskett on the side of the school's auditorium.