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- Bel Air Woolen Mills, Pittsfield, Mass., 1876 -

- 1876
- Collections - Artifact
Bel Air Woolen Mills, Pittsfield, Mass., 1876
- The Warp-Loom, 1748 -

- 1748
- Collections - Artifact
The Warp-Loom, 1748
- The Working of Wool, 1748 -

- 1748
- Collections - Artifact
The Working of Wool, 1748
- Earle & Eames Trade Catalog, "Notice to Manufacturers: Earle & Eames Now Manufacturing all Kinds of Cotton and Wool Card Clothing," 1846 -

- 1846
- Collections - Artifact
Earle & Eames Trade Catalog, "Notice to Manufacturers: Earle & Eames Now Manufacturing all Kinds of Cotton and Wool Card Clothing," 1846
- Wool Press, 1850-1875 -

- 1850-1875
- Collections - Artifact
Wool Press, 1850-1875
- General Dyestuff Corporation Sample Book, "Spring Season Shades On Woolen Piece Goods," 1931 -

- 1931
- Collections - Artifact
General Dyestuff Corporation Sample Book, "Spring Season Shades On Woolen Piece Goods," 1931
- Wilkinson Sheep Shears, circa 1900 -

- circa 1900
- Collections - Artifact
Wilkinson Sheep Shears, circa 1900
- Pontoosuc Woolen Mills, Pittsfield, Mass., 1876 -

- 1876
- Collections - Artifact
Pontoosuc Woolen Mills, Pittsfield, Mass., 1876
- The Shear-man's Work, 1748 -

- 1748
- Collections - Artifact
The Shear-man's Work, 1748
- Woolen Mill in Portland, Oregon, 1923-1924 - Beginning in 1920, the Henry Ford-owned weekly newspaper <em>The Dearborn Independent</em> ran a series of front-page articles that denounced all things Jewish. Though the series ended in 1922, the weekly continued anti-Jewish diatribes in other articles, most notably those attacking Aaron Sapiro, a farm cooperative organizer. This photograph, though it appears harmless, was part of that campaign.

- 1923-1924
- Collections - Artifact
Woolen Mill in Portland, Oregon, 1923-1924
Beginning in 1920, the Henry Ford-owned weekly newspaper The Dearborn Independent ran a series of front-page articles that denounced all things Jewish. Though the series ended in 1922, the weekly continued anti-Jewish diatribes in other articles, most notably those attacking Aaron Sapiro, a farm cooperative organizer. This photograph, though it appears harmless, was part of that campaign.