Trans Arabian Pipeline Camp. Ras Mishaab. Ray Scott, cook in the kitchen. The kitchen and mess hall were made of wooden frames covered with canvas. A large diesel oil stove was used for cooking.
Display of model kitchen, with white cabinetry, sink, Hotpoint automatic electric stove, and refrigerator, and busy patterned tile or carpet on the floor. Title supplied by cataloger.
Display of model kitchen, with dark wood dining table and chairs, white refrigerator, Hotpoint automatic electric stove, and sink, and busy patterned tile or carpet on the floor. Title supplied by cataloger.
Display for "The Equipment & Supply Co. Office & Display Rooms, 420-422 Baxter Ave. Louisville, Ky. Contractors Equipment Building Specialists." Display includes fireplace, table, dumb waiters, and kitchen cabinets and appliances. Title supplied by cataloger.
Hilliard House kitchen. The "Hilliard House" at 1074 Cherokee Road and Grinstead Drive in Louisville, Kentucky was built by James Williamson Henning in 1871 as a wedding gift for his daughter Maria Louisa Henning Hobbs Hilliard and her husband John James Byron Hilliard. The brick Victorian home was passed down in the family until 1982; it is now a historic Kentucky landmark. Image used in the Irwin-Hilliard Collection family history book "Stories of the Hilliard House 1871-1981," Book 1A, 1987, page 64 and "Edward H. Hilliard Sr. and Nanine Sherley Irwin Hilliard, 1945-1978," Book 7, volume 2, 1994, page 173.
Hilliard House pantry and china cabinets. The "Hilliard House" at 1074 Cherokee Road and Grinstead Drive in Louisville, Kentucky was built by James Williamson Henning in 1871 as a wedding gift for his daughter Maria Louisa Henning Hobbs Hilliard and her husband John James Byron Hilliard. The brick Victorian home was passed down in the family until 1982; it is now a historic Kentucky landmark. Additional information from Nanine Hilliard Greene's family history book "Stories of the Hilliard House 1871-1981," Book 1A, 1987, page 61-62: "There were three pantries between the dining room and the kitchen: the pantry, the middle pantry, and the kitchen pantry, designed for storage and as buffers between the kitchen and the dining room. On Wednesday afternoons the maid would lay newspaper on the table in this photo and polish all the knives, forks, spoons, and serving dishes. This is where mother [Nanine Sherley Irwin Hilliard] arranged vases of flowers. The stainless steel sink and the dishwasher were installed about 1960 but the cracking plaster and the ceiling light with bare bulb were never redone. Through the doorway the middle pantry can be seen and the door to the maids' toilet and wash bowl, added about 1960." Image used on page 62. Image also used in the Irwin-Hilliard Collection family history book "Edward H. Hilliard Sr. and Nanine Sherley Irwin Hilliard, 1945-1978," Book 7, volume 2, 1994, page 170.
Hilliard House kitchen. The "Hilliard House" at 1074 Cherokee Road and Grinstead Drive in Louisville, Kentucky was built by James Williamson Henning in 1871 as a wedding gift for his daughter Maria Louisa Henning Hobbs Hilliard and her husband John James Byron Hilliard. The brick Victorian home was passed down in the family until 1982; it is now a historic Kentucky landmark. Image used in the Irwin-Hilliard Collection family history book "Stories of the Hilliard House 1871-1981," Book 1A, 1987, page 63 and "Edward H. Hilliard Sr. and Nanine Sherley Irwin Hilliard, 1945-1978," Book 7, volume 2, 1994, page 172.