Principal's residence, Millersville University campus.
Provenance
Album of 35 mm slides of buildings in Lancaster County designed by architecht C. Emlen Urban. Slides taken by Carol Morgan for a lecture for the Torch Club in June 2002.
St. Joseph's Catholic Church and cemetery taken from Filbert Street
Provenance
Photo album entitled "My Cabbage Hill" compiled by Francis X. Schaller, Jr., of photos of the Cabbage Hill neighborhood of Lancaster. Photographs were taken in 2008, but Mr. Schaller's memories of the neighborhood from 1935 to 1948, from the age of 5 to the age of 18, are included. Mr. Schaller is an Armstrong retiree and grew up in the Cabbage Hill neighborhood.
Photograph- Marker at Lefever Cemetery on North Star Road off of Route 896 near Strasburg. Marker reads: The Huguenots were the protestants of France. Dr. James LeFevre, of 1450, made the first translation of the Bible into French, published in 1530. Isaac LeFevre, our American ancestor, escaped from persecution and death in France in 1685, came to America in 1708 and settled here in Pequea Valley in 1712.
Photograph- Marker at Lefever Cemetery on North Star Road off of Route 896 near Strasburg. Marker reads: The Huguenots were the protestants of France. Dr. James LeFevre, of 1450, made the first translation of the Bible into French, published in 1530. Isaac LeFevre, our American ancestor, escaped from persecution and death in France in 1685, came to America in 1708 and settled here in Pequea Valley in 1712.
Description
Marker at Lefever Cemetery on North Star Road off of Route 896 near Strasburg. Marker reads: The Huguenots were the protestants of France. Dr. James LeFevre, of 1450, made the first translation of the Bible into French, published in 1530. Isaac LeFevre, our American ancestor, escaped from persecution and death in France in 1685, came to America in 1708 and settled here in Pequea Valley in 1712.
Photograph- Lefevre Cemetery on North Star Road off of Route 896 near Strasburg. Plaque reads "This farm including the Lefevre Cemetery has been the home of seven generations of Lefevres since it was bought by Isaac Lefevre of 1669 from William Penn who bought it from the Pequea Indians in 1682."
Photograph- Lefevre Cemetery on North Star Road off of Route 896 near Strasburg. Plaque reads "This farm including the Lefevre Cemetery has been the home of seven generations of Lefevres since it was bought by Isaac Lefevre of 1669 from William Penn who bought it from the Pequea Indians in 1682."
Description
Lefevre Cemetery on North Star Road off of Route 896 near Strasburg. Plaque reads "This farm including the Lefevre Cemetery has been the home of seven generations of Lefevres since it was bought by Isaac Lefevre of 1669 from William Penn who bought it from the Pequea Indians in 1682."