Browse Items (600 total)

  • Collection: John L. Lovell Collection

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Aerial view of the interior of First Congregational Church looking over the pews to the front, which is decorated with plants and flowers.

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View of the church from across Main Street looking west. The yard is landscaped with trees and shrubs.

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Interior view of First Congregational Church from the right and looking over pews toward the front, which is decorated with plants and flowers. "Christ the Conqueror" banner is hung above the organ.

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View east down the middle of Main Street with the First Congregational Church on the right and a section of one of the Dickinson houses on the left.

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View of the church from across the street and west on Main Street.

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View of the front and left side of the church and the parsonage beside it.

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View of the right side of the church and the old fence.

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View of the right side of the church and new fence.

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View of the front and right side of the church and a covering of snow on the ground.

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View of the front of the church and a covering of snow on the ground.

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Aerial view of the Mill Lane looking north toward Amherst College and showing fields, livestock, gardens, houses, barns, etc. The Gaylord/Simeon Clark house (later the Lyman Thompson house) is in the foreground; and the Grist Mill is on the left.…

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View of a house with people, horses, and oxen in the yard. According to a copy of a hand-written note accompanying this photograph, this house was owned by Charles R. Dickinson who later sold it to Enoch Clark. The Ferry family acquired it in 1929.…

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Area view of Montague Road in North Amherst. The building on the right is a sawmill once located on Eastman pond. It was first owned by Ansel Marshall, and later by Levi Dickinson. The first house on the left was the property of the Eastman family;…

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Stately elms without foliage line the dirt street. There are houses on the left and a horse and wagon parked in front of the shop of Lee and Phillips. Frederick H. Hitchcock writes, in The Handbook of Amherst, "That portion of Pleasant Street which…

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View of the Lewis J. Spear Blacksmith shop on North Pleasant Street with employees and horses.
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