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The interior of a blacksmith shop with two men working at center. "The photograph was taken in the late 1800s in my great-granddad's first homestead which is now known as Castle Peak Ranch. The ranch that the family currently owns north of the original homestead were homesteads of my grandfather Joh, my dad and his sister Beaulah." -- John Buchholz July 5, 2000
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Man and girl standing on the boardwalk under the roof overhang of the Owens Store (the original Avon Store) in Avon, Colorado. Advertising signs: "Hills Bros. Coffee," chocolates, visible. Screen door is open; front door closed. Could be either snowing or raining. The store was located 100 feet west of the Avon Road on the north side of Highway 6. It was relocated and restored to the Eagle museum center in 1996. Date is noted as Oct. 15, 1928. [Title...
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Dale "Spike" Stout of Gypsum with his hand on the neck of a young doe. In the background are a motorcycle, barrel, and log cabin. [Title supplied from catalog prepared by the Eagle County Historical Society.]
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Using a lift to move drums of chemicals in the Gilman mine.
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John Cowden, behind the barrel, and Buster Case, Calvin and Bobby Christen(?) on the slide at the Edwards School, April 22, 1953.
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Building construction at the Methodist Church in Eagle, Colorado. Men are pictured with shovels and a concrete mixer in the center. A tractor can be seen in the right background.
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Ed Taylor at the Eagle Depot, sitting on a barrel, possibly labeled "Tibbetts." There are milk cans at the left.
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Wreckage from the head-on accident at Allenton, showing barrels in a crushed car. Photos from this crash are labeled variously: 1919, 1920 or 1921.
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D. & R.G. at Eagle station, "taking water." "There was a water tank at Eagle, located a little east of the depot. The water was piped from the water tank to the stand pipe. From the stand pipe, the water goes into the engine's tender to generate steam, steam being the source of engine's power." -- Jimmy Blouch
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Nannie King poses for a picture while standing in a barrel. Taken in 1914. "One grand Lady from the South, Nannie King. Lived with us a long time on Brush Creek, Colo." -- Alda Borah