Search
- Pennant, "The Aquarium, Key West, Fla.," 1940-1965 -

- 1940-1965
- Collections - Artifact
Pennant, "The Aquarium, Key West, Fla.," 1940-1965
- Sponge Market, Key West Harbor, Fla., U.S.A., 1898 -

- 1898
- Collections - Artifact
Sponge Market, Key West Harbor, Fla., U.S.A., 1898
- "Life" Bound Volume of Issues, April-June 1947 - First published in 1883 as a general-interest and humor publication, Life magazine became America's first all-photographic weekly news magazine after being purchased and re-envisioned by publisher Henry Luce in 1936. Under Luce, its popularity boomed, and by the 1950s more than 22 million Americans read the publication. This bound volume contains issues from April to June 1947.

- April 1947-June 1947
- Collections - Artifact
"Life" Bound Volume of Issues, April-June 1947
First published in 1883 as a general-interest and humor publication, Life magazine became America's first all-photographic weekly news magazine after being purchased and re-envisioned by publisher Henry Luce in 1936. Under Luce, its popularity boomed, and by the 1950s more than 22 million Americans read the publication. This bound volume contains issues from April to June 1947.
- Suit, Worn by Hamilton Roddis, 1934-1937 -

- 1934-1937
- Collections - Artifact
Suit, Worn by Hamilton Roddis, 1934-1937
- President Harry Truman and Naval Officers in Presidential Limousine, Key West, Florida, 1952 - United States Secret Service agent Morgan L. Gies was responsible for White House vehicles from 1941 to 1967, serving five presidents. This photograph from his personal collection shows Gies behind the wheel of a 1949 Lincoln Cosmopolitan. His passengers are Captain Cecil C. Adell, Admiral William Leahy, Secretary of State Dean Acheson, and President Harry S. Truman (wearing glasses).

- March 07, 1952
- Collections - Artifact
President Harry Truman and Naval Officers in Presidential Limousine, Key West, Florida, 1952
United States Secret Service agent Morgan L. Gies was responsible for White House vehicles from 1941 to 1967, serving five presidents. This photograph from his personal collection shows Gies behind the wheel of a 1949 Lincoln Cosmopolitan. His passengers are Captain Cecil C. Adell, Admiral William Leahy, Secretary of State Dean Acheson, and President Harry S. Truman (wearing glasses).
- Tourists in Key West, Florida with the Conch Tour Train, 1962 - The arrival of the Florida East Coast Railway in 1912 helped turn Key West, Florida, into a popular tourist destination. After a destructive hurricane ended railroad operations in 1935, automobiles, airplanes, and cruise ships took over the tourist traffic. The rubber-tired Conch Tour Train opened in 1958 as a tribute to FEC's long-vanished Key West trains.

- 1962
- Collections - Artifact
Tourists in Key West, Florida with the Conch Tour Train, 1962
The arrival of the Florida East Coast Railway in 1912 helped turn Key West, Florida, into a popular tourist destination. After a destructive hurricane ended railroad operations in 1935, automobiles, airplanes, and cruise ships took over the tourist traffic. The rubber-tired Conch Tour Train opened in 1958 as a tribute to FEC's long-vanished Key West trains.
- President Harry Truman Arriving at U. S. Naval Station Memorial Chapel, Key West, Florida, 1952 - United States Secret Service agent Morgan L. Gies was responsible for White House vehicles from 1941 to 1967, serving five presidents. This photograph from his personal collection shows Gies behind the wheel of President Harry S. Truman's presidential convertible, a 1949 Lincoln Cosmopolitan. It was taken during Truman's 1952 vacation in Key West, Florida.

- March 23, 1952
- Collections - Artifact
President Harry Truman Arriving at U. S. Naval Station Memorial Chapel, Key West, Florida, 1952
United States Secret Service agent Morgan L. Gies was responsible for White House vehicles from 1941 to 1967, serving five presidents. This photograph from his personal collection shows Gies behind the wheel of President Harry S. Truman's presidential convertible, a 1949 Lincoln Cosmopolitan. It was taken during Truman's 1952 vacation in Key West, Florida.
- President Harry Truman at the Key West Naval Station, Florida, 1952 - United States Secret Service agent Morgan L. Gies was responsible for White House vehicles from 1941 to 1967, serving five presidents. This photograph from his personal collection shows Gies behind the wheel of President Harry S. Truman's presidential convertible, a 1949 Lincoln Cosmopolitan. It was taken during Truman's 1952 vacation in Key West, Florida.

- March 09, 1952
- Collections - Artifact
President Harry Truman at the Key West Naval Station, Florida, 1952
United States Secret Service agent Morgan L. Gies was responsible for White House vehicles from 1941 to 1967, serving five presidents. This photograph from his personal collection shows Gies behind the wheel of President Harry S. Truman's presidential convertible, a 1949 Lincoln Cosmopolitan. It was taken during Truman's 1952 vacation in Key West, Florida.
- President Harry Truman Riding in Motorcade, Key West Naval Station, Florida, 1952 - United States Secret Service agent Morgan L. Gies was responsible for White House vehicles from 1941 to 1967, serving five presidents. This photograph from his personal collection shows Gies leading a motorcade from behind the wheel of President Harry S. Truman's presidential convertible, a 1949 Lincoln Cosmopolitan. It was taken during Truman's 1952 vacation in Key West, Florida.

- March 02, 1952
- Collections - Artifact
President Harry Truman Riding in Motorcade, Key West Naval Station, Florida, 1952
United States Secret Service agent Morgan L. Gies was responsible for White House vehicles from 1941 to 1967, serving five presidents. This photograph from his personal collection shows Gies leading a motorcade from behind the wheel of President Harry S. Truman's presidential convertible, a 1949 Lincoln Cosmopolitan. It was taken during Truman's 1952 vacation in Key West, Florida.
- President Harry Truman, Key West, Florida, 1951 - United States Secret Service agent Morgan L. Gies was responsible for White House vehicles from 1941 to 1967, serving five presidents. This photograph from his personal collection shows President Harry S. Truman on vacation in Key West, Florida. Agent Gies stands by the driver's door of Truman's presidential convertible, a 1949 Lincoln Cosmopolitan.

- November 21, 1951
- Collections - Artifact
President Harry Truman, Key West, Florida, 1951
United States Secret Service agent Morgan L. Gies was responsible for White House vehicles from 1941 to 1967, serving five presidents. This photograph from his personal collection shows President Harry S. Truman on vacation in Key West, Florida. Agent Gies stands by the driver's door of Truman's presidential convertible, a 1949 Lincoln Cosmopolitan.