| Photograph Collection | Requires cookie* | 1 | Title: | Dunbar Company Photographs
| | | Creator: | Dunbar Company | | | Dates: | 1910-1970 | | | Abstract: | The Dunbar Company, also known as Dunbar Construction Company, was established in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1884 by William Dunbar, a carpenter. The collection consists of views of commercial, business, industrial, and other buildings, located in Cleveland, Ohio. Included are photographs of the Cleveland Trust Company, Elliott Shoe Company, Pathe Film Company, Dinner Bell Meat Company, Fisher Food Inc., Ohio Bell Telephone Company, Geauga Community Hospital, Slovak Home for the Aged, Immaculate Heart of Mary School, Ursuline College Campus Center, and other representative examples of the company's work. | | | Call #: | PG 314 | | | Extent: | 1.40 linear feet (4 containers) | | | Subjects: | Dunbar Company -- Photograph collections. | Buildings -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Architecture -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Industries -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Construction industry -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Commerce -- Photographs.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 2 | Title: | Boldt Construction Company Photographs
| | | Creator: | Boldt Construction Company | | | Dates: | 1916-1929 | | | Abstract: | The Boldt-Low Construction Company was founded in 1915 in Cleveland, Ohio, by John Boldt, Albert S. Low, R. M. Calfee, M. M. Feidner, and J. C. Fogg. The company changed its name to the Boldt Construction Company in 1918. The Boldt Construction Company specialized in commercial, industrial, and church building construction and maintained its corporate office at 6110 Euclid Avenue. The collection consists of seventy-five black and white photographs that document construction projects in Cleveland, Ohio, and other locations in Ohio, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. | | | Call #: | MS 5300 | | | Extent: | 0.20 linear feet (1 container) | | | Subjects: | Construction industry -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Architecture -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs.
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Photograph Collection | Requires cookie* | 3 | Title: | Walker and Weeks Photographs
| | | Creator: | Walker and Weeks | | | Dates: | 1920-1950 | | | Abstract: | Walker and Weeks was the foremost architectural firm in Cleveland, Ohio, in the 1920s. The firm specialized in bank buildings, religious structures in classical revival styles, and major commercial and public buildings. The collection consists of photographs and negatives of the buildings, arches, memorials, and proposed plans designed by the Cleveland, Ohio architectural firm of Walker and Weeks. Buildings and structures depicted include Cuyahoga County Hospital; Allen Memorial Library; the American Legion statue; the Burton Memorial; Broadway Savings and Trust Co.; Cleveland Board of Education; Case Observatory; Citizens Savings and Trust Co.; Cleveland Discount Co.; Cleveland Heights High School; Cleveland Post Office; several branches of the Cleveland Public Library; the Cleveland Mall plan; Collinwood Neighborhood Center; Columbus Memorial Lighthouse competition; Commerce National Bank of Toledo, Ohio; proposed plans of Fairmount Presbyterian Church; First Church of Christ Scientist; Foster Mausoleum; Garfield Bank; Gates Mills Town Hall; Cleveland Museum of Art; Guaranty Savings and Loan Co.; Guardian Bank Building; Hanna family headstones; Harrison County, W. Va. Courthouse; Hathaway Brown School; Hattonchata Arch, Hatlonchatel, Belgium; Lincoln Memorial in Cleveland; Lorain County Savings and Trust Co.; Merchants Bank; Metcalf family headstones; Midland Bank; Montfaucon Clock Tower, Montfaucon, Belgium; Mount Union College; Oberlin College swimming pool; Ohio Wesleyan College; Public Auditorium; Street Light Standard; Severance Hall; United Banking and Trust Co.; Central National Bank; Providence Memorial, Providence, Rhode Island; University Circle; University School; Wesleyan College, Macon, Georgia; and various unidentified photographs and negatives. | | | Call #: | PG 109 | | | Extent: | 1.40 linear feet (4 containers) | | | Subjects: | Walker and Weeks (Firm) -- Photograph collections. | Architecture -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Buildings -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Architectural firms -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 4 | Title: | Union Commerce Building Records
| | | Creator: | Union Commerce Building | | | Dates: | 1948 | | | Abstract: | The Union Commerce Building, subsequently known as the Huntington Building, is located at the corner of Euclid Avenue and East Ninth Street in downtown Cleveland, Ohio. It has housed a series of banks, retail stores, and offices since it was built in the 1920s. The collection consists of a building appraisal completed by Ostendorf-Morris Company at the request of the noteholders committee of Union Properties, Inc. | | | Call #: | MS 5223 | | | Extent: | 0.20 linear feet (1 container) | | | Subjects: | Architecture -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Architecture -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Buildings -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Buildings -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Buildings, structures, etc. -- Photographs. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Buildings, structures, etc. | Commercial buildings -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Huntington Building (Cleveland, Ohio) / Union Trust Company (Cleveland, Ohio)
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Photograph Collection | Requires cookie* | 5 | Title: | Martin Linsey Photographs, Series II
| | | Creator: | Linsey, Martin | | | Dates: | 1954-1973 | | | Abstract: | Martin Linsey was a Cleveland, Ohio, watercolorist, photographer, and art teacher. Linsey, a graduate of the Cleveland School of Art, was a watercolorist who developed a national reputation for his work by the early 1940s. He also excelled as a photographer, exhibiting prize-winning works at the Cleveland Museum of Art. Linsey's livelihood included painting, teaching art and photography, and producing architectural drawings and personal portraits. The collection consists of approximately 1000 negatives of various historic structures in Cleveland and the Western Reserve, including views of bridges, buildings, churches and synagogues, industry, monuments, and residences. Many of these views were made for the Historic American Buildings Survey. | | | Call #: | PG 179 | | | Extent: | 0.40 linear feet (1 container) | | | Subjects: | Linsey, Martin -- Photograph collections. | Architecture -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Buildings -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Buildings, structures, etc. -- Photographs.
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Photograph Collection | Requires cookie* | 7 | Title: | John Steinke Photographs
| | | Creator: | Steinke, John | | | Dates: | 1920-1940 | | | Abstract: | John Steinke (ca. 1895-ca. 1971) was a free-lance amateur photographer of German descent who was born in New York, but moved to Cleveland, Ohio. Most of his photographic activity appears to have spanned the 1920s-1940s. He lived in at least two different locations in Bratenahl during his lifetime: East 118th Street and Burton Avenue. By vocation, he worked in the sheet metal industry. As a photographer, he worked in a wide variety of genres, experimenting with fine-art photography as well as commissioned work for various organizations in the Cleveland area. He submitted, and had his work shown in Cleveland and other nearby cities, as well as at shows in the Smithsonian, Canada, France, Greece, and Japan. Steinke played an important early role in the Cleveland Photographic Society, being president of the club in 1923, as well a member of the Board of Trustees. He played a crucial role in not only forming, but also leading the club's Photographic School, doing much of the teaching himself. When the school expanded and featured a faculty of teachers, he focused on teaching the technical aspects of photography. He also championed teaching photography to young people. He led a free six-week course in photography for high-school students and Boy Scouts. Steinke made personal donations of photographic equipment to the Society, and he played an important role as manager in the Society's regularly hosted print competitions. Steinke resigned from the Cleveland Photographic Society after a disagreement with the club president Ralph Hartman regarding the appropriate role of the club's Lecture Bureau. After his resignation, he taught classes at the Y.M.C.A., and soon formed another photography group known as the Cleveland Camera Guild. The collection consists of glass negatives, large format negatives, 35 mm negatives, oversize mounted photographs, photograph scrapbooks, and photographic prints in a variety of sizes. | | | Call #: | PG 561 | | | Extent: | 2.80 linear feet (6 containers) | | | Subjects: | United States. Works Progress Administration. | Federal Writers' Project. | Cleveland Photographic Society. | Terminal Tower Complex (Cleveland, Ohio) -- Photographs. | Cleveland Public Library -- Photographs. | Photography -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Commercial photography -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Architecture -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Landscapes -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Poverty -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Race relations -- Photographs. | Industrialization -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Theater -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Photographs. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Pictorial works.
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