Box 6
Contains 755 Results:
Shy reindeer, doubtfully watching the traveller’s approach to the herd on Hardanger, Norway. 48-647. Underwood & Underwood Publishers. Copyright by Underwood & Underwood, 1905.
Many of the cards in this series are meant to be educational in nature. There are also some sets that are used for professional reasons. For example, the optometric community used stereographs to gauge vision and diagnose their patients.
Giraffes in the Kruger National Park, Transvaal, the Game Sanctuary of South Africa. 20743. Keystone View Company Manufacturers and Publishers. Made in U.S.A., undated.
Many of the cards in this series are meant to be educational in nature. There are also some sets that are used for professional reasons. For example, the optometric community used stereographs to gauge vision and diagnose their patients.
Numberless Sheep Grazing in the North Dakota Bad Lands. 1280. Copyrighted by T.W. Ingersoll, 1905.
Many of the cards in this series are meant to be educational in nature. There are also some sets that are used for professional reasons. For example, the optometric community used stereographs to gauge vision and diagnose their patients.
Astronomy
Many of the cards in this series are meant to be educational in nature. There are also some sets that are used for professional reasons. For example, the optometric community used stereographs to gauge vision and diagnose their patients.
Full Moon. Sold only by Underwood & Underwood. C. Bierstadt Publishers. Niagara Falls, N.Y., undated.
Many of the cards in this series are meant to be educational in nature. There are also some sets that are used for professional reasons. For example, the optometric community used stereographs to gauge vision and diagnose their patients.
Moon, undated.
Many of the cards in this series are meant to be educational in nature. There are also some sets that are used for professional reasons. For example, the optometric community used stereographs to gauge vision and diagnose their patients.
Views of the Great Solar Eclipse, 1869, Beginning. From Negatives made by the Philadelphia Photographic Eclipse Expedition, managed by Prof. Henry Morton, Ph.D. and under the direction of Prof. J.H.C. Coffin, U.S.N., of the Nautical Almanac Office, Washington, D.C., 1869 August 7.
Many of the cards in this series are meant to be educational in nature. There are also some sets that are used for professional reasons. For example, the optometric community used stereographs to gauge vision and diagnose their patients.
Views of the Great Solar Eclipse, 1869, Early on. From Negatives made by the Philadelphia Photographic Eclipse Expedition, managed by Prof. Henry Morton, Ph.D. and under the direction of Prof. J.H.C. Coffin, U.S.N., of the Nautical Almanac Office, Washington, D.C., 1869 August 7.
Many of the cards in this series are meant to be educational in nature. There are also some sets that are used for professional reasons. For example, the optometric community used stereographs to gauge vision and diagnose their patients.
Views of the Great Solar Eclipse, 1869, Crescent. From Negatives made by the Philadelphia Photographic Eclipse Expedition, managed by Prof. Henry Morton, Ph.D. and under the direction of Prof. J.H.C. Coffin, U.S.N., of the Nautical Almanac Office, Washington, D.C., 1869 August 7.
Many of the cards in this series are meant to be educational in nature. There are also some sets that are used for professional reasons. For example, the optometric community used stereographs to gauge vision and diagnose their patients.
Views of the Great Solar Eclipse, 1869, Total Eclipse. From Negatives made by the Philadelphia Photographic Eclipse Expedition, managed by Prof. Henry Morton, Ph.D. and under the direction of Prof. J.H.C. Coffin, U.S.N., of the Nautical Almanac Office, Washington, D.C., 1869 August 7.
Many of the cards in this series are meant to be educational in nature. There are also some sets that are used for professional reasons. For example, the optometric community used stereographs to gauge vision and diagnose their patients.