Showing Collections: 4131 - 4140 of 4175
William Wright Masonic collection, 1906-1908
Williams-Night Celebration postcard, 1941 March 21
This post card from Joseph Webb Lodge of Boston invites George P. Kingman of Brighton, Massachusetts, to the Williams-Night Celebration held by the lodge on March 21, 1941.
Willshire Temple, No. 494, minute book, 1936-1940
Windmill and Reservoir at the Pythian Home in Ogdensburg, New York, postcard, 1907-1914
Photolithograph of the windmill and reservoir at the Pythian home in Ogdensburg, New York. There is a woman standing in the foreground and a silo behind her and a windmill. To the left, is a stone building with a barn in the background.
Windsor Lodge of Perfection charter issued by the Supreme Council, Northern Masonic Jurisdiction, 1885 August 18
Winthrop Assembly, No. 32, Order of the Rainbow Girls, program, 1981
With my compliments postcard, 1905
Postcard with an illustration of cattle or buffalo horns with two tridents crossed behind and hoofs below. The top of the postcard reads "With my compliments."
Wm. J. Dinsmore Manufacturer of Regalia and Paraphernalia for the Improved Order of Red Men, undated
This catalog contains regalia, costumes, and paraphernalia for the Improved Order of Red Men. The regalia generally romanticizes and appropriates non-white cultural heritage by using stereotypes and/or caricatures.
Woman and man dressed in knight's uniform with a Pythian poem postcard, 1909
Color lithograph of a woman and a man in a knight's uniform. To the left of the couple, is a Pythian poem that reads "I always liked a Pythian/ That tale of a comrade's trust/ Rings down through the year's 'mid echoing cheer's/ that defied a tyrant's 'must'/ No Pythian ever yet outgrew/ His usefulness -- his honor, too/ I certainly do like a Pythian/ He's the friend for me and you." Above the poem is the Knights of Pythias emblem.
Woman Sitting on Man's Lap with Elk Head in Background postcard, 1908
Color Lithograph Woman in pink dress sitting on man's lap with Elk head in the background and a grandfather clock pointing to 11. Short poem at the bottom of the card reads "Father calls him William/ Mother calls him Will/ The girls all call him Willie/ But an Elk says Hello Bill".
