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(11,001 - 11,008 of 11,008)
Pages
- Title
- Burlington: Block no. 84, West half, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Burlington: Unidentified property on Goch Street, undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Portraits - Family
- Description
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An outdoor group portrait of an unidentified man, woman with eight children and family dog as they stand in front of a wood frame clapboard house. Three children kneel on a toboggan. Same family group also seen in mcalA09F12i34, mcalA15F02i30, i31, i32, i33, i35
- Title
- Portraits - Individuals
- Description
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Mid 1940s photo of an older man working on the legs of a piece of furniture (cabinet?). The room has remnants of wallpaper and appears now to be a workshop. See also mcalB16F14i09
- Title
- Burlington: W. A. Griswold et al., undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Title
- Mt. St. Mary's Convent
- Description
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"Cathedral Grammar School" (written on back of photo). Sisters of Mercy enjoying a break of cookies and conversation, perhaps at the school or at the convent. Photo #5. Undated.
- Title
- Order of the Eastern Star
- Description
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Members of the Order of the Eastern Star attend a function, dressed in formal attire. Photo #6.
- Title
- Cephas Kent, Jr. Diary, Undated
- Date Created
- undated
- Description
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Cephas Kent Jr. was born on April 2, 1754 in Suffield, CT (Colony) to Cephas and Hannah (Spencer) Kent. In 1773, Kent moved with his family to what later became Dorset, Vt., where his father, a deacon as well as a tavern owner, took an active role in the American and Vermont independence...
Show moreCephas Kent Jr. was born on April 2, 1754 in Suffield, CT (Colony) to Cephas and Hannah (Spencer) Kent. In 1773, Kent moved with his family to what later became Dorset, Vt., where his father, a deacon as well as a tavern owner, took an active role in the American and Vermont independence movements. Kent enlisted in the Continental Army during the summer of 1775 and served as an aide-de-camp on General Montgomery’s staff. His primary responsibilities included cooking and caring for the officers’ baggage, but he also participated in several skirmishes, taking up arms at decisive moments during the Siege of Fort St. Jean.On January 30, 1779, Kent married Lydia Sheldon and the couple had several children. Kent died in Dorset on January 9, 1813.
The first part of Kent’s diary details his religious experiences between the ages of 12 and 21, while the remainder describes his participation in the Continental Army’s campaign into Canada in 1775, especially the Siege of Fort St. Jean (“St. Johns”).
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