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- Circus Poster, Buffalo Bill's Wild West & Frontier Exhibition, 1908 -

- 1908
- Collections - Artifact
Circus Poster, Buffalo Bill's Wild West & Frontier Exhibition, 1908
- Circus Poster, Buffalo Bill's Wild West & Rough Riders Present "Football on Horseback Between Cowboys and Indians," 1908 -

- 1908
- Collections - Artifact
Circus Poster, Buffalo Bill's Wild West & Rough Riders Present "Football on Horseback Between Cowboys and Indians," 1908
- Circus Poster, Buffalo Bill: "Here We Are Again! Home From Foreign Lands," 1908 - In the late nineteenth century, printers developed a lithograph method that produced brightly colored posters. In advance of a circus coming to town, general agents glued these eye-catching generic posters to building walls, fences, and in window displays. To announce when and where the performances would happen, local printers sometimes provided letterpress paper date strips to paste onto the posters' lower margin.

- 1908
- Collections - Artifact
Circus Poster, Buffalo Bill: "Here We Are Again! Home From Foreign Lands," 1908
In the late nineteenth century, printers developed a lithograph method that produced brightly colored posters. In advance of a circus coming to town, general agents glued these eye-catching generic posters to building walls, fences, and in window displays. To announce when and where the performances would happen, local printers sometimes provided letterpress paper date strips to paste onto the posters' lower margin.
- Circus Poster, Buffalo Bill's Wild West And Rough Riders, 1908 -

- 1908
- Collections - Artifact
Circus Poster, Buffalo Bill's Wild West And Rough Riders, 1908
- Circus Poster, Col. W. F. Cody, "Buffalo Bill," The World Famous Scout, Guide & Originator of The Great Wild West Exhibition, 1908 - In the late nineteenth century, printers developed a lithograph method that produced brightly colored posters. In advance of a circus coming to town, general agents glued these eye-catching generic posters to building walls, fences, and in window displays. To announce when and where the performances would happen, local printers sometimes provided letterpress paper date strips to paste onto the posters' lower margin.

- 1908
- Collections - Artifact
Circus Poster, Col. W. F. Cody, "Buffalo Bill," The World Famous Scout, Guide & Originator of The Great Wild West Exhibition, 1908
In the late nineteenth century, printers developed a lithograph method that produced brightly colored posters. In advance of a circus coming to town, general agents glued these eye-catching generic posters to building walls, fences, and in window displays. To announce when and where the performances would happen, local printers sometimes provided letterpress paper date strips to paste onto the posters' lower margin.
- Circus Poster, "Buffalo Bill's Wild West & Pioneer Exhibition, Great Train Holdup & Bandit Hunters of the Union Pacific," 1907 -

- 1907
- Collections - Artifact
Circus Poster, "Buffalo Bill's Wild West & Pioneer Exhibition, Great Train Holdup & Bandit Hunters of the Union Pacific," 1907
- Circus Poster, Buffalo Bill & The 101 Ranch Shows Present: The Military Pageant "Preparedness," 1916 - In the late nineteenth century, printers developed a lithograph method that produced brightly colored posters. In advance of a circus coming to town, general agents glued these eye-catching generic posters to building walls, fences, and in window displays. To announce when and where the performances would happen, local printers sometimes provided letterpress paper date strips to paste onto the posters' lower margin.

- 1916
- Collections - Artifact
Circus Poster, Buffalo Bill & The 101 Ranch Shows Present: The Military Pageant "Preparedness," 1916
In the late nineteenth century, printers developed a lithograph method that produced brightly colored posters. In advance of a circus coming to town, general agents glued these eye-catching generic posters to building walls, fences, and in window displays. To announce when and where the performances would happen, local printers sometimes provided letterpress paper date strips to paste onto the posters' lower margin.
- Children's Games, School, 1902 - In 1890, Jenny Young Chandler, 25 years old and recently widowed, began working for the <em>New York Herald</em>. As a photojournalist and feature writer, Chandler captured life in Brooklyn, New York, and vicinity. By 1922, the time of her death, she had produced over 800 glass plate negatives. Her sensitive, insightful photographs depict people from all walks of life and the world in which they lived.

- 1902
- Collections - Artifact
Children's Games, School, 1902
In 1890, Jenny Young Chandler, 25 years old and recently widowed, began working for the New York Herald. As a photojournalist and feature writer, Chandler captured life in Brooklyn, New York, and vicinity. By 1922, the time of her death, she had produced over 800 glass plate negatives. Her sensitive, insightful photographs depict people from all walks of life and the world in which they lived.