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Displaying 61 - 90 of 510 Clear

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Olmsted Ginkgo

By Sarah Davis
| April 25, 2024
Known for its fan-shaped leaves that turn from bright green in the summer to bright yellow in the fall, the ginkgo's earliest leaf fossils date back 270 million years. The ginkgo drops its leaves at the same time creating a solid yellow carpet under the tree. There are six original ginkgo trees

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Olmsted Horse Chestnut

By Sarah Davis
| April 25, 2024
There is one original horse chestnuet tree still living on the U.S. Capitol campus today.

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People of Wisconsin Tree

By Sarah Davis
| April 16, 2024
U.S. Capitol Grounds commemorative tree sponsored by the Wisconsin Congressional Delegation to honor the people of Wisconsin.

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Yorktown, 1781

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
At the end of the Revolutionary War, the British are shown laying down their arms against a symbolic sunset.

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Timucuan Village

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
Three Native Americans of northern Florida's Timucuan tribe are depicted near their village.

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Stalking Deer

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
A member of a hunting-gathering tribe is shown in a northern forest with pine and fur trees.

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Spanish Mission

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
A converted Native American kneels in prayer under the guidance of a monk in front of the El Carmelo mission.

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Northern Wilderness

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
A lone explorer in a canoe enters the picture, symbolically from the east.

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Louisiana Purchase, 1803

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
The third signing of the Louisiana Treaty, which occurred in New Orleans, is depicted.

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Lewis and Clark

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
The explorers are shown on the Missouri river looking over a Mandan village.

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Fort St. Augustine

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
The fort with its arrowhead-shaped bastions is shown in an aerial view.

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Explorers' Portage

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
Trappers carry a birch-bark canoe across a rapids in a stream.

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Boston Tea Party, 1773

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
Boston Harbor appears in a moonlit scene, with people dressed as Native Americans throwing crates of tea from a boat; this famous event led to the Revolutionary War.

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Boone at Cumberland Gap

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
Daniel Boone brings settlers into Kentucky.

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Gold Prospectors

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
This mural shows different methods used by prospectors in the search for wealth in California, the Yukon and Alaska.

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Sod House

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
A typical prairie home is shown with a barbed wire fence, which represents the settlement of the great open plains.

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Sharecroppers

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
A couple picks cotton in the south with their cabin behind them and the plantation house in the distance.

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Pony Express

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
Riders are shown at the Hollenberg station, readying to switch ponies. In the background workers string cables for the telegraph, which would soon replace the Pony Express.

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Land Grant College

By Sarah Davis
| February 13, 2024
This college building in Kansas was one of the first created under the 1862 Morrill Act, which was meant to ensure higher education for all classes of Americans.

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Island Dance

By Sarah Davis
| February 12, 2024
A village celebration with dancers and indigenous percussion instruments is shown in a typical Hawaiian setting.

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Indian Ceremony

By Sarah Davis
| February 12, 2024
An unusual combination of dancers in Hopi and Navajo costumes performs a ceremony.

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Hunting Game

By Sarah Davis
| February 12, 2024
A single hunter with a long rifle stalks a squirrel and a turkey.

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Golden Spike

By Sarah Davis
| February 12, 2024
At the connection of the Union Pacific and Central Pacific railroads in Promontory, Utah, two locomotives meet and two men shake hands before a group of workers.

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Fur Trade

By Sarah Davis
| February 12, 2024
A longhouse of the northwest is decorated with paintings and set amid totems. Before the building, a fur trader is trading guns to the Native Americans for furs.

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Drying Cod

By Sarah Davis
| February 12, 2024
Representing the Great Banks and North Atlantic fisheries, this vignette depicts salt bins, a rod shed, and a pier; a three-masted ship is seen offshore.

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Clearing Land

By Sarah Davis
| February 12, 2024
Two settlers use a team of oxen to remove the stumps of newly felled trees while, in the background, others build a log hut next to an inland river.

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Covered Wagons

By Sarah Davis
| February 12, 2024
Two different types of covered wagons are shown, along with livestock and a family of settlers cooking a meal over an open fire.

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Canal and Locks

By Sarah Davis
| February 12, 2024
Along the Erie Canal at Lockport, New York, horses are shown pulling the barges that have just gone through the locks.

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The First Thirteen Colonies

By Sarah Davis
| February 12, 2024
The map shows the first thirteen colonies and the year in which each entered the Union. The original Northwest territories, the Connecticut Reserve, and Spanish and West Florida are also shown.

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Alaskan Purchase, 1867

By Sarah Davis
| February 12, 2024
On this map of the lands, an Eskimo hunts in a kayak; nearby seal and walrus represent the fur trade as well as the subsistence of the indigenous people.

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