Browse Items (1534 total)
Thumbnail | Title | Description | Date | Date Added |
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Panel Presenting on Catalytic Cracking Units | This is a black and white photograph of six people at a table with a "Fluid Catalytic Cracking" sign behind them. As part of the 50th anniversary celebration for Standard Oil Company, the company conducted several community outreach educational programs and panels in 1957. | 1957 | October 30, 2018 | |
Outside view of coal mine #2 in Glen Carbon, Illinois | This photograph shows coal mine #2 in Glen Carbon | Unknown | December 8, 2016 | |
Outside View of Church | Outside view of church | Unknown | December 8, 2016 | |
Outside the Owens-Illinois Glass Factory | This photograph of the Owens-Illinois Glass Factory was taken from the entrance by the railroad tracks. | Unknown | November 15, 2016 | |
Outdoor Group Photograph of Men and Women | This is a black and white group photograph of 25 men and women standing outdoors, they are likely Standard Oil employees. | Unknown | November 12, 2018 | |
Our 150 Years: 1812 - 1962. Madison County, Illinois | 1962 | September 6, 2017 | ||
Original 1818 Town Plan of Alton by Rufus Easton | This town plan for Alton was plotted by St. Louis resident and Missouri territory delegate Rufus Easton in 1817. He named the town in honor of his son, Alton R. Easton. This plat also shows Langdon, Alby, and George streets, which Easton likely named after some of his other children. According to writing on the plat, Rufus Easton signed and delivered the plat on January 1, 1818. It was then approved on March 26, 1818 by John T. Lusk, a justice of the peace for Madison County. There are two copies: the first is on cloth; the second on paper. The map shows the property divisions of the town, including which properties were already sold. The edge of the Mississippi River is also visible, on which the river landing is planned and a promenade set aside for common use. | January 1, 1818 | March 10, 2017 | |
Order from Major General E.R.L. Canby for Elliot Mudge | This is an order from Major General E.R.L. Canby permitting Elliot L. Mudge to return to his home without being taken by U.S. authorities. It is presumed that Mudge's middle initial was written as "L" in error. | May 12, 1865 | April 5, 2019 | |
Olin Wetzel Oral History | This oral history interview with Ellen Nore-Nordhouser is part of a collection of oral histories conducted as part of a research project related to the 50th Anniversary of SIUE between 2005 and 2008. In his interview, Mr. Wetzel discusses his involvement in the establishment of SIUE. The interview contains information about the financing, local support, land development, rotary, and SIU Carbondale's involvement in the creation of the Edwardsville Campus. The interview demonstrates that the creation of the Edwardsville campus was a groundswell movement by members of the Edwardsville Rotary and Chamber of Commerce in an attempt to re-develop Edwardsville's industry after the boom of World War II development declined. Wetzel also discusses the growth of Edwardsville as a city and its changes over time, such as downtown re-development, housing development, and the construction of the YMCA in addition to the hiring and work of several regional architectural firms. |
April 20, 2006 | February 20, 2021 | |
Old tower building | Old tower building | Unknown | December 8, 2016 |