Studio portrait of a baby, possibly the child of F.H. Bullen. The baby wears a white gown and is seated on an upholstered chair that is draped with an animal skin rug.
Studio portrait of a man, possibly E. Micheli. He wears a dark suit and vest with a white shirt and wide silk necktie. He has wire frame glasses and his hair is combed back from his face.
Studio portrait of a baby, possibly the child of James Canterberry. The baby wears a white gown decorated with eyelet lace and sits on an animal fur rug.
A fence with log posts and rails stands next to a dirt road in the foreground of this view of James Peak at the intersection of Gilpin, Clear Creek and Grand counties in Colorado. The fence is possibly part of William Cozens' ranch near Fraser in...
Two men, possibly including William Cozens, sit on the porch of Cozens' ranch in Fraser in Grand County, Colorado. Cozens was the first official sheriff of Gilpin County, Colorado, but moved to Fraser in 1876 with his wife, Mary York Cozens. A sign...
A train from the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Company passes near a cabin with a large corral next to it, possibly in Boulder or Gilpin County, Colorado. A small river is in the foreground. A horse and buggy is stopped among the shrubs on the far...
A carriage is parked near a log cabin and tent near Ranch Creek in Colorado. Ranch Creek is a tributary of the Fraser River, a branch of the Colorado River. The cabin is possibly that of William Fullerton, the director of the First National Bank of...
A wood fence borders the near field of a ranch in Colorado, possibly the home of John A. Coulter in Clear Creek County. Coulter was a judge in Georgetown and was elected to the Colorado House of Representatives in 1880. A ranch house stands across...
Large rocks lie scattered in the foreground in this landscape scene, possibly near the Pecos Mission in New Mexico or at Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado. The tops of several trees are in the background, and gray clouds line the sky.
Prior to excavation, a Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) survey was conducted over a large portion of the planned construction site. GPR works by sending radar waves into the ground, which then bounce off buried features such as walls and foundations....