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Photo postcard of the bachelor quarters in the Canal Zone for workers on the Madden Dam.
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A view of Beaver Creek Resort taken sometime in winter prior to August of 2008.
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A winter scene of Bridge Street in Vail. A sigh for La Cave, a French restaurant can be seen on the left.
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A winter scene of Bridge Street in Vail looking towards Vail Mountain. A sign for the Casino Vail can be seen on the right.
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Photo postcard looking up Broadway (the main street) in Eagle, Colorado, north toward Castle Peak in the backround. The Eagle theatre is on the far left.
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Sanborn photo postcard [W-1116] looking south down Broadway St., Eagle, Colorado, showing downtown buildings. Highway 40 sign in intersection. Texaco station on left. [Title supplied from catalog prepared by the Eagle County Historical Society.]
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Sanborn photographic postcard of "Camp Hale--Tennesse [sic.] Pass Between Leadville and Red Cliff, Colo. W2144" The view gives a good idea of the extent of Camp Hale in the Pando Valley.
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A nighttime view of the Children's Fountain in Vail.
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Photo postcard of ”The Big Barn,” Doll Brothers Ranch, Gypsum Valley. Barn had 3 full stories, running water and electricity and could stable 250 horses individually. Fencing in foreground.
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"Along with the move of the county seat came an obligation to build a modern county courthouse. Designed by renowned architect J. Francis Pillsbury, the Eagle County Courthouse was constructed in 1932 at a cost of $60,000. The sheriff's office was on the basement floor along with living quarters for the jailer. The jail and courtroom were on the third floor (note the bars on the window at leaft). -- Kathy Heicher, Early Eagle p.82
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A postcard of the Glenwood Springs railroad station, originally a stop on the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad. The station is still standing and is now owned by the Union Pacific Railroad. The station is served by Amtrak's "California Zephyr." The station first opened in 1904.
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A postcard of Vail in the winter. The Gorsuch store is on the right.
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Photo postcard of the Maxwell place, taken by John Ambos. "Among the very early pioneers of the area were Elliott and Mary Maxwell who located on 160 acres of land at the confluence of the Grand River and Elk Creek, about four miles west of McCoy about 1896. The elevation there was about 6,500 feet, the lowest in the area where most vegetables and some varieties of hardy fruits could be grown." -- McCoy Memoirs p.155 [Title supplied from catalog...
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Photo postcard of the Odd Fellow's Hall in Gypsum taken sometime after its construction in 1902. A horse and buggy are tethered at the street. The lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Gypsum, burned after a December 15,1990, late night fire. According to Fire Chief, Dave Vroman, the blaze was traced to a furnace recently installed. First Lutheran Church of Gypsum and Mount of the Holy Cross Lutheran Church of Vail took over ownership...
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A photocopy of a postcard of Red Cliff. The caption on the reverse of the copy states that the Quartzite Hotel, Tippet house, Rockwood house, and the Stariha? house are all visible.
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Photo postcard of Sadie Beck and Dessie Tomlin Beck hugging in front of a log cabin, probably at Monarch, Colorado.
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A summer view of Vail Village, taken prior to 1987. From the verso, "Vail Village nestled at the base of north America's biggest, single skiing mountain." Peter Runyon Photography, Box 1441, Vail, Colorado 81657.
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A nighttime view of Vail, taken around 1979.