One of a set of three toiletry tools with mother-of-pearl handles and steel shanks. This glove button hook has a round, tapering shank with a hook at the end. The handle widens and flattens out to a rounded terminal.
One of a set of three toiletry tools with mother-of-pearl handles and steel shanks. This tool has a round swell going to a very thin end with tiny hook. It is perhaps a corset hook. The handle widens and flattens out to a rounded terminal.
Lithograph? 2-part marriage certificate in black ink with gold border elements. 2 printed colored flowers are visible through 2 oval cutouts. Certificate announces the marriage of Alice Fisher and John B. Herr.
One of a set of three toiletry tools with mother-of-pearl handles and steel shanks. Most of tool length comprises a stout file. Tip extends to a shart point for cleaning fingernails. Shell handle widens and flattens out to a rounded terminal.
Handmade rectangular grater crudely fashioned with tinned sheet iron and having 14 staggered slits of 1.25" width and raised edges for cutting. All four edges are folded to back, but the two long sides are rolled over wire to stiffen length of tool.
Crudely fashioned tin tool has wear and imperfections at blades and back corners. Abrasions and corrosion scattered overall. Peeling paint or corrosion.
Ellmaker Homestead farm. General view - dwelling house in the grove on the left, barn in center, old family graveyard of John Leonard Ellmaker on the right in the distance.
Ellmaker Homestead farm. The front garden, old spinning wheels used by previous generations - the wheel on the porch was brought from the Palatinate, Frankenthal, in May 1726, by Mrs. John Leonard Ellmaker (born Hornberger) when she came to Lancaster County, PA.
Ellmaker Homestead farm. All that now remains of the old apple tree, originally brought from the Palatinate by Mrs. Anna Margaretha Ellmaker (Hornberger) when she and her husband, John Leonard Ellmaker, came to Lancaster County in 1726. It flourshed for 160 years until about 1886. The farm was sold in 1887, the life of the old tree may therefore be said to have been coexisted with that of the farm itself in the Ellmaker Family.