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The North-West : Port Townsend, Washington Territory
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Port Townsend
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At head of title: "United States - West Coast Washington." Stamps: Portland Instrument Co. Feb 16 1933. Prime meridian: GM. Relief: contour lines. Graphic Scale: Miles, yards. Projection: Polyconic. Printing Process: Lithography.
269460
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Whitney's map of Port Townsend and environs, Washington : Compiled from official records
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Submap: Puget Sound; Union Pacific logo. Prime meridian: GM. Relief: hachures. Graphic Scale: Miles. Projection: Cylindrical. Printing Process: Lithography.
307244
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North America Sheet V The North West and Michigan Territories
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Kashnor notes, "Wisconsin is called Huron or North-West Territory, locating the Green Bay Township and a part bounded by the Illinois boundary, and the Wisconsin as 'Iowa Country'. Shows Chicago and Fort Dearborn as separate places." "J.& C. Walker sculpt. Tenner." Prime meridian: GM. Relief: hachures. Graphic Scale: Miles. Projection: Pseudocylindrical. Printing Process: Engraving. Verso Text: MS notes: 830 30.
105:830 S
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Judge [James Gilchrist] Swan's office and Indian curios. Port Townsend, Wash. [Washington]
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Photographs of the American West, dating from the 1870s to the 1890s, collected by Carl S. Dentzel (1913-1980), director of the Southwest Museum in Los Angeles, California, including a disbound album of photographs of Alaska taken by A. L. Broadbent. These views show Revenue Cutter Service ships and officers; Alaskan natives; towns; scenery; the fur trade and mission schools. Other notable photographs in this collection include portraits of John C. Frémont, Harrison Gray Otis, and John A. Sutter; a series of Lake Tahoe card photographs; and views of early western settlers around the time of the Oklahoma Land Rush of 1889. The collection also depicts Alaskan native graves; missionaries; walrus hunting; whaling ships; totem poles; officers in the U.S. Revenue Cutter Service; vacationers throughout California; the logging industry; Kingston, New Mexico; Greek Orthodox church buildings; the first grand jury in Nome, Alaska; James Gilchrist Swan; and a portrait of one of the collection's photographers, Alfred Lee Broadbent. Photographers who contributed to this collection include William C. Billington, Alfred Lee Broadbent, F. Davey, Edward De Groff, Charles D. Kirkland, D. S. Mitchell, C.H. Shaffner, Julius Ulke, and Raper James Waters.
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