Browse Items (299 total)

74.780.12 96 dpi wm.jpg
A bedroom set in one of bedrooms at P.A. Peterson's Home on East State Street.

74.780.110 96 dpi wm.jpg
Jennie Johnson and Edward Hall seated in a parlor, possibly in the Delbert Trahern home based on the carpet pattern.

75.198.3 96 dpi wm.jpg
Two women sitting on a couch or bed. The woman at right appears to be sewing.

79.157.48 96 dpi wm.jpg
A sideboard filled with flowers in a dining room. Sideboards were traditionally used in dining rooms to serve food, the display of serving dishes and for storage.

79.188.38 96 dpi wm.jpg
Talcott, Ralph, and Margaret Williams pose with their mother who is sitting on an overstuffed armchair in a living room. The girl at right has a bob haircut popular during the 1920s.

79.188.80 96 dpi wm.jpg
The Monday Club 65th Birthday Luncheon, held at the home of Mrs. E. P. Lathrop at 105 Douglas. Identified are Mrs. Walter Green, Mrs. Webb Stevens, Mrs. Harold Walcott, Mrs. William E. Hinchcliff, Miss Louise Smith. The Monday Club was founded in…

79.188.144 96 dpi wm.jpg
An unidentified sitting room. A sitting room was public space within the house where guests were entertained. Artwork chosen for display provided an identity for the family living in the home. The choice of art reflected the family's beliefs. On…

79.188.146a 96 dpi wm.jpg
An unidentified home greenhouse. Owners of large homes in the United States built conservatories onto their residences during the late 1800s and early 1900s. A conservatory is a glass structure that served as living space as well as protecting…

79.188.146c 96 dpi wm.jpg
An unidentified home greenhouse. Owners of large homes in the United States built conservatories onto their residences during the late 1800s and early 1900s. A conservatory is a glass structure that served as living space as well as protecting…

80.6.33 96 dpi wm.jpg
Irl and Dorothy Martin with their children, "Huck" (Harold) and Mary Barbara (Mrs. Billy Bittle) in front of the fireplace.

80.84.4 96 dpi wm.jpg
A parlor in a late nineteenth century home. Parlors were public rooms where guests were entertained. A piano provided music during a visit. Artwork was chosen for display to impress visitors and provide status to the family.

85.109(I).845 96 dpi wm.jpg
A parlor with a fireplace. By the 1840s fireplaces were no longer the main heating source for the house. Fireplaces became a decorative focal point in the room. The curtain at the doorway could be closed to provide some privacy when visiting with…

85.109(I).846 96 dpi wm.jpg
Looking through the parlor doorway from what may be the front hall. Nineteenth century homes had a parlor located near the front door. It was a public room of the house for visiting with guests. Locating public rooms near the front door kept guests…

85.109(I).847 96 dpi wm.jpg
Native American cultures and decorative items were very popular with nineteenth century Americans. In the 1890s, many American homes had a "cozy corner" to display oriental arts. By the early 1900s, the corner became a place to display Native…

85.109(I).851 96 dpi wm.jpg
An Arts and Crafts style interior. The Arts and Crafts style was popular from 1880 -1920, focusing on craftsmanship and the natural beauty of materials. It featured rooms and furnishings designed for efficient and simple living. The home floor plan…

85.109(I).905.13 96 dpi wm.jpg
Living room furnishings indicate use of this room for visiting with guests. A radio console popular in the 1930s is by the window next to the door. Radios of this time were in cabinets so large that they were considered decorative furniture as well…

85.109(I).905.103 96 dpi wm.jpg
A living room with lace curtains at the window. A slant top desk is in the back corner. The slant top is hinged at the bottom allowing it to be pulled downward to serve as a writing surface. This type of desk uses a small amount of space and keeps…

85.134.12b 96 dpi wm.jpg
Two children posed in a living room. The cabinet displays various mementos and books.

88.7.32a 96 dpi wm.jpg
Dining room at the William Brown house, 326 South Third Street. The room is set up for a large gathering. Lace curtains on the windows were a typical decoration in the late nineteenth century. Decorating with tassels and fabric in doorways was very…

88.7.32b 96 dpi wm.jpg
Dining room at the William Brown house, 326 South Third Street. Folding chairs are set up for a large gathering.

88.112.9 96 dpi wm.jpg
A cozy corner at the Gust Nordstrom home, 218 West Street. A couch lined with tassels and large throw pillows is at the left. Lace curtains at the windows were typical of the late nineteenth century. Mass produced machine made lace was available,…

88.112.10 96 dpi wm.jpg
Possibly a dining room at the Gust Nordstrom home, 218 West Street. An animal skin rug is on the floor in front of the fireplace. As heating technology changed fireplaces became nostalgic and a focus point of the room. As a focus point, the…

88.112.11 96 dpi wm.jpg
Nordstrom home at 218 West Street. A view of the arrangement of public rooms in the house. Doorways are draped with fabric and bead curtains which can be closed to provide some privacy to the room.

88.112.12 96 dpi wm.jpg
Miss Pearl Biller's room in the Nordstrom home at 218 West Street. Room walls provide a large surface for decorating. The flower swag border at the top of the wall adds color to the room. During the mid to late 1800s, homes were highly decorated to…

88.122.355L 96 dpi wm.jpg
A main room of an unidentified home where the family could relax. Mementoes are displayed throughout the room indicating that this is public space where visitors would be welcome. Light is provided by the fireplace and the table lamp.

89.7.18 96 dpi wm.jpg
A parlor with a piano in an unidentified home. A piano provided entertainment for visitors and was a focal point in the room. Portraits are displayed on piano and on floor.

89.7.19 96 dpi wm.jpg
An unidentified sitting room and parlor. The tassels in the doorway are decorative and serve to divide the space from one room to another. The use of animal skin rugs was a way to bring nature into the domestic setting of the home.

89.165.2e 96 dpi wm.jpg
An unidentified dining room. Decorations cover every surface including the ceiling, walls and windows. Seated around the table is a gathering of sisters and sister-in-laws of the Andrew family. Left to right are Jane Andrew (Mrs. John Picken), Janet…

90.5.21c 96 dpi wm.jpg
The library in the Harold Clark home at 939 North Second Street. This home was designed by Rockford architect Jesse Barloga in 1933-1934. The home was designed for Lewis Harold Clark and his wife Effie. Harold Clark was the son of J. L. Clark, who…

2011.61.36 96 dpi wm.jpg
Emil Johnson sitting in a large wooden rocking chair.

2011.61.37 96 dpi wm.jpg
Emil, Martha, and George Johnson in their sitting room of the house they rented on 1412 Parmele Street in Rockford.

2011.61.39 96 dpi wm.jpg
George and Emil Johnson in their sitting room on George's Confirmation Day. The house they rented was located at 1412 Parmele Street.

2011.61.40 96 dpi wm.jpg
George Johnson on his Confirmation Day. The sitting room in in the house the Johnson family rented at 1412 Parmele Street. The furniture is draped at the head and arms with decorative fabric called antimacassar. The purpose was to prevent the soiling…

2011.61.41 96 dpi wm.jpg
Emil and Martha Johnson in their sitting room on their 25th wedding anniversary. Antimacassars are being used on the armchairs.

2012.7.9 96 dpi wm.jpg
Two men with a little girl are seated in a porch attached to a house. The enclosed porch appears to be a place for the family to relax. A porch allowed for the viewing of the outdoors while enjoying the comforts of the house interior.

2013.12.7 96 dpi wm.jpg
The Spafford House at 501 North Prospect, Rockford. Above the sitting room fireplace is a portrait of Mrs. Jessie Spafford.

74.584.106 96 dpi wm.jpg
Mathilda Oleson's home where Irene and her son Selwyn Seek lived in 1926, located at 5413 North Second Street. Interurban rails are in the foreground. The architectural style is a variance of Tudor. The house is cross gabled with strong timbering on…

74.584.141 96 dpi wm.jpg
The home of Wilbur W. and Hilda E. Seek at 1408 Sixth Street. Wilbur (1885 - 1976) and Hilda (1889 - 1964) moved into the home circa 1932 and lived there the rest of their lives. The architectural style is Folk Victorian based on the decorative…

74.584.142 96 dpi wm.jpg
The home of Wilbur W. and Hilda E. Seek at 1408 Sixth Street after remodeling. The decorative trim on the roof line and front porch have been removed. The porch was enclosed and windows put in which maintains the openness a porch provides. The wavy…

74.584.119 96 dpi wm.jpg
A child in a home's backyard. A solid wood plank fence at right separates a home space from a neighbor and provides some privacy. The backyard provides recreational space for a family while the front yard was usually not fenced and acts to connect…

74.584.132 96 dpi wm.jpg
An unidentified baby in a buggy near a front porch. Sidewalks provide a sturdy flat surface for pedestrians to walk on away from vehicles. Cement was a popular building material for sidewalks in America since the early 1900s.

74.584.133 96 dpi wm.jpg
A baby on a lawn in a residential neighborhood. The solid fence at the left served to provide privacy in neighborhoods where the houses are built close together. The outbuilding at the right would have housed a horse and carriage before automobiles…

74.593 96 dpi wm.jpg
The birthplace of Chauncey Lee Calkins (1891 - 1985) located at 204 North Street (now Park Avenue) in Rockford.

74.595.61r 96 dpi wm.jpg
Pictured left to right, Miriam, Bernice, "Me", Stuart, and Philip. The setting where people are photographed is important. Many family photographs are taken in the home's yard. Including the house in the picture provides a connection to the people…

74.595.98 96 dpi wm.jpg
The Delbert Trahern family home at 323 Whitman Street. This was the childhood home of Helen Trahern, daughter of Delbert and Sadie Trahern. Built circa 1903 - 1908, it replaced a stone house, using part of the foundation. The stone house had faced…

74.595.99 96 dpi wm.jpg
Looking south east on Whitman Street.

74.595.102 96 dpi wm.jpg
Dr. Marvin Hanaford's house at 1995 Harlem Boulevard. Marvin and his wife Melvina moved into the home by 1911 and lived there until their deaths in 1938 and 1921 respectively. The house was built about 1900 with the property line going to the Rock…

74.595.205 96 dpi wm.jpg
The main entrance to the home of Delbert and Nona Trahern and their daughter Helen at 323 Whitman Street.

74.595.255 96 dpi wm.jpg
Helen Trahern sitting on the front steps of a home that is possibly the Trahern home circa 1900 - 1908 at 1128 North Church Street. Helen was age eight in 1902 when the family lived there.

74.595.273 96 dpi wm.jpg
Delbert Trahern home located at 323 Whitman Street in Rockford. This was the childhood home of Helen Trahern, daughter of Delbert and Sadie Trahern. Built circa 1903 - 1908, it replaced a stone house, using part of the foundation. The stone house had…
Output Formats

atom, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2