Mobile Bakery Cart, Botetourt Hotel
Hotels - Virginia - Gloucester County
Carts & wagons - Virginia - Gloucester County
Mobile bakery cart parked outside of the Botetourt Hotel, Gloucester County, Virginia
Nash, Susan Higginson
Circa 1929-1934
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image
Na260
Family on Ox Cart
African Americans - Virginia - Photographs
African American families - Virginia
An African American family posing on their ox cart in an unidentified location in Virginia
Owens, E. L.
1911
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image
Owens029
Main Street in Yorktown
African American men - Virginia - Yorktown
African Americans - Virginia - Photographs
Yorktown (Va.)
Streets - Virginia - Yorktown
An African American man driving an ox cart along Main Street in Yorktown, Virginia
Owens, E. L.
1911
jpeg
image
Owens022
Children on Ox Cart
African American children - Virginia - Yorktown
Children - Virginia - Yorktown
Architecture, Domestic - Virginia - Yorktown
Carts & wagons - Virginia - Yorktown
Children on ox cart outside of Somerwell/Lightfoot House, Yorktown, Virginia
Owens, E. L.
1911
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image
Owens011
Samuel Harris' Cheap Store
Streets - Virginia - Williamsburg
Stores, Retail - Virginia - Williamsburg
Business enterprises - Virginia - Williamsburg
View looking towards Samuel Harris' Cheap Store located at the corner of Botetourt and Duke of Gloucester Streets, Williamsburg, Virginia.
unknown
jpeg
Image
Cole-38d (see also L-290, 53-948)
Market Day
African Americans - Virginia - Williamsburg - Photographs
Transportation - Virginia - Williamsburg
Oxen - Virginia - Williamsburg
An African American in a horse drawn cart pulled up next to a row of carts and wagons, possibly outside Samuel Harris' Cheap Store in Williamsburg, Virginia,
unknown
Circa 1904
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Image
Cole-101 W (see also 75-NJI-421)
African Americans with Ox Cart
African Americans - Virginia - Williamsburg - Photographs
African American men - Virginia - Williamsburg
Transportation - Virginia - Williamsburg
Two African American men conversing by an ox cart in Williamsburg, Virginia.
Unknown
circa 1889
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Image
Cole-098 W (see also L-315)
Ox Cart on Duke of Gloucester Street
Streets - Virginia - Williamsburg
Printing Office and Post Office (Williamsburg, Va.)
Block 18-2. Building 12B.
Transportation - Virginia
Oxen - Virginia
An unknown photographer captured this oxen drawn cart trundling past a business and two residences along the portion of Duke of Gloucester Street occupied today by the restored Printing Office, Post Office, and Bookbindery. The Virginia Gazette Printing Office (middle) and the west end of the Gill Dwelling (left) are both eighteenth-century structures that were still standing and in use in the late nineteenth-century. At right is a more modern structure that was later torn down as part of the restoration effort.
Unknown
jpeg
Image
Cole-043 (see also L-317)
Ox Cart in Front of Samuel Harris' Cheap Store
Transportation - Virginia
Stores, Retail - Virginia - Williamsburg
Oxen - Virginia
Streets - Virginia - Williamsburg
An ox cart passes by customers outside of Samuel Harris' Cheap Store located at the corner of Botetourt and Duke of Gloucester Streets, Williamsburg, Virginia.
Unknown
jpeg
Image
Cole-041 (see also 75-NJI-391)
Samuel Harris' Cheap Store
Stores, Retail - Virginia - Williamsburg
Streets - Virginia - Williamsburg
View looking east on Duke of Gloucester Street towards Samuel Harris' Cheap Store located at the corner of Botetourt and Duke of Gloucester Streets, Williamsburg, Virginia.
Unknown
jpeg
Image
Cole-040 (see also 53-947)
Ox Cart near Harris Cheap Store
Streets - Virginia - Williamsburg
Oxen - Virginia
Transportation - Virginia
African Americans - Virginia - Williamsburg - Photographs
An ox cart parked near Samuel Harris' Cheap Store located on the corner of Botetourt and Duke of Gloucester Streets, Williamsburg, Virginia.
Unknown
jpeg
Image
Cole-039 (see also 75-NJI-424)
Samuel Harris' Cheap Store
Streets - Virginia - Williamsburg
Stores, Retail - Virginia - Williamsburg
View looking towards Samuel Harris' Cheap Store located at the corner of Botetourt and Duke of Gloucester Streets, Williamsburg, Virginia.
Unknown
jpeg
Image
Cole-038c
Samuel Harris' Cheap Store
Streets - Virginia - Williamsburg
Stores, Retail - Virginia - Williamsburg
View looking towards Samuel Harris' Cheap Store located at the corner of Botetourt and Duke of Gloucester Streets, Williamsburg, Virginia.
Unknown
jpeg
Image
Cole-038a
Store Fronts on Duke of Gloucester Street
Streets - Virginia - Williamsburg
Stores, Retail - Virginia - Williamsburg
African Americans - Virginia - Williamsburg - Photographs
View from southwest of general store west of Harris' Cheap Store on Duke of Gloucester Street, Williamsburg, Virginia.
Unknown
jpeg
Image
Cole-036 (see also 53-951)
Ox Cart
Nash, Susan Higginson
Transportation - Virginia
Oxen - Virginia
Workers in ox cart, Virginia, 1930
Nash, Susan Higginson
1930
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Image
Na2453
Smithfield Homecoming Parade
African American Photographers
Parades & processions - Virginia - Smithfield
Children driving pony cart in Smithfield Homecoming Parade, Smithfield, Virginia, November 1949.
Durant, Albert W.
Nov. 1949
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Image
DUR-268
Ludwell-Paradise Stable
Ludwell-Paradise House (Williamsburg, Va.)
Block 18-1. Building 07.
Architecture, Domestic - Virginia - Williamsburg
Architecture, Colonial - Virginia - Williamsburg
Historic buildings - Virginia - Williamsburg
Outbuildings - Virginia - Williamsburg
Exterior of the Ludwell-Paradise Stable, viewed from Nicholson Street, 1933. A dovecote is visible in the gable-end roof of the stable, with holes for pigeons to roost in (though the holes have recently been covered over). The Cooper's Shop is now located in the Ludwell-Paradise Stable, where hogsheads, barrels, casks, buckets, and pails of all sizes are constructed.
The Ludwell-Paradise Stable is behind the Ludwell-Paradise House (not pictured here), one of the eighty-eight original eighteenth-century buildings at Colonial Williamsburg. The Ludwell-Paradise house played an important role in the museum's founding, as it was the first property purchased by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. in the early days of Williamsburg's restoration. Members of the Ludwell family resided here in the eighteenth century, and Lucy Ludwell Paradise, one of their more eccentric offspring, became a well-known socialite in both London and Virginia. She also became a namesake for this home that is a cornerstone of Williamsburg's restoration.
Shaw, Thomas Mott
1933
This material is protected by copyright law (Title 17, U.S. Code). For reproduction queries: <a href="http://research.history.org/JDRLibrary/Visual_Resources/VisualResourcePermission.cfm">Rights and reproductions</a>
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D2008-COPY-1014-1042