Brother Hedrick, an old man with a mustache and glasses wearing a dark suit and white shirt without a tie, stands outdoors holding an open Bible. A winter landscape of trees and hills is visible behind him. This picture may have been used by Jean Thomas in an article in American Magazine.
Harry Looney, wearing a suit and straw hat, leans on Jean Thomas, wearing a blouse, gloves, and long skirt and holding a hat. They are standing on steps next to bushes.
Harry Looney (left, with umbrella) and an unidentified woman and man stand outside a brick building with painted billboard reading "..bber Co." Title supplied by cataloger.
Two men, including Harry Looney (left), stand outside a brick building with painted billboard. Both men are wearing suits and straw hats, and Looney carries an umbrella. Title supplied by cataloger.
Clad in overalls, three young men and a boy look at a dog while standing in front of a haystack on a farm in Champaign, Illinois. Title supplied by cataloger.
Brother Hedrick, an old man with a mustache and glasses wearing a dark suit and white shirt without a tie, stands outdoors holding an open Bible. A winter landscape of trees and hills is visible behind him. This picture may have been used by Jean Thomas in an article in American Magazine.
A cabinet card of the exterior of a stately brick house with an overgrown lawn, apparently belonging to Henry Bell, Jean Thomas' uncle. A little girl wearing a dress with pinafore standing outside one door of the house is Henry's daughter, Nellie Bell; another girl (apparently a maid) stands under an awning to the left. The photograph is torn in the lower left-hand corner; the right side is marked with 'J.H. Bayley Skellgate Ripon.' Handwritten on verso: 'Mr. Henry Bell's residence. Nellie Bell their daughter in front doorway / Maid in rear doorway / The chimney pots are like those on museum home of Jean Thomas, The Traipsin' Woman / Ashland, Ky.'
A woman (possibly Jean Thomas) wearing a long black dress, a sign reading "Dry," and holding a cane bearing a ribbon stands with a man wearing a band uniform and holding a drum and drumsticks outside a frame house. The "Dry" sign may indicates that they participated in the Temperance movement to ban the sale of alcoholic beverages; Temperance principles were enacted into law in the United States during Prohibition (1920-1933). Title supplied by cataloger.