Postcard depicting four dogs sitting in a row and Legally themed postcard depicting 4 dogs sitting in a row, as judges
Description:
The Court of Appeal: Printed title on postcard front., Rotary Photographic Plate Sunk Gem Series: Printed text on left margin of postcard back, In lower right corner of image, reverse type: Landor., In lower left corner of image, reverse type: P 528., Rotary Photographic Co. Ltd. was active in London between 1897 and 1916., Manuscript notes on verso: "Many thanks, wish I knew what it all meant. Have you named the new cow yet?" signed J. I., Addressed to Mr. Craig, [P--?] Palace, Donegal Rd., Belfast., Also available in original print http://morris.law.yale.edu/record=b1281865, Digital reproduction. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale Law Library, 2019 LM Z Postcards v.1 no.3 tall., and Online resource; description based on print version record.
"A green coated post-card that photolithographically reproduces the wood-engraved front wrapper of part no. I of the original serial parts of The mystery of Edwin Drood"--Podeschi.
Publisher:
Chapman & Hall,
Subject (Name):
Dickens, Charles,--1812-1870.--Mystery of Edwin Drood
American literature--20th century, American poetry--20th century, Authors, American--20th century--Archives, Authors--United States--20th century, Gay authors, LGBTQ resource, Poets, American--20th century--Archives, and Poets--United States--20th Century
Photographic postcard of the lynching of Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith, taken by Lawrence Beitler. Shipp and Smith were murdered by a mob in Marion, Indiana on August 7, 1930
Description:
Lawrence Beitler (1885-1960) was an American studio photographer., Caption in English., Title devised by cataloger., Place and date of creation supplied by cataloger., and Printed caption on verso.
Subject (Geographic):
Indiana, Marion., Marion, Grant County, and Marion (Ind.)
Subject (Name):
Beitler, Lawrence., Shipp, Thomas, 1911-1930, and Smith, Abram, -1930
Subject (Topic):
Death and burial, African Americans, Violence against, Lynching, Racism, and Race relations