Automobile belonging to C.H. Brice, Wilmington contractor and builder, believed to be a friend of Frank Zebley. License plate reads Delaware License # 140 - 1919.
Automobile belonging to C.H. Brice, Wilmington contractor and builder, believed to be a friend of Frank Zebley. License plate reads Delaware License # 140 - 1919.
Automobile belonging to C.H. Brice, Wilmington contractor and builder, believed to be a friend of Frank Zebley. License plate reads Delaware License # 140 - 1919.
This scene shows part of the loading of large cartridges of DuPont 60% gelatin dynamite in the Susquehanna River near Marietta, Pennsylvania. The cartridges were five inches in diameter, 24 inches long and weighed 25 pounds each. The illustration...
Collection guide; Business leaders; Construction and building industry
Collection guide for John McShain papers. McShain was a Philadelphia and Washington, D.C.,-based building contractor. His major projects included the White House renovation (1950-1951), the Pentagon, the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library...
Printed caption: "The attempt to move the county government from New Castle to Wilmington was bitterly opposed by many. Legislative bills, referenda, and Grand Jury reccomendations were prepared to no avail until, in February 1879, the General...
The Old Mill,' home of T. Coleman du Pont, shortly before home was demolished and estate submerged to form Hoopes Reservoir. Work being done by William H. Doyle, contractor and nurseryman.