Boston Public Library
Boston Public Library holds more than 23 million items, estimated to be among the three largest collections in the country, including books, maps, manuscripts, letters, drawings, and other original works dating back as early as the 10th century.
Showing 366 items from Boston Public Library
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Comedia famosa. San Franco de SenaBoston Public LibraryImage
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Saynete nuevo. El fin del paboBoston Public LibraryImage
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Saynete nuevo. Intitulado El novio rifado : Para doce personasBoston Public LibraryImage
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Ruth FarnsworthBoston Public LibraryImage
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U.S. nurses prisoners of JapsBoston Public LibraryImage
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NurseBoston Public LibraryImage
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Defendants in Farnsworth slayingBoston Public LibraryImage
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Palm Trees were about the only objects on the Pacific Island of Guam which bowed before Typhoon Karen without submitting to her 172 mph winds. The tall trees continue to sway gently in slight breezes, while all beneath them is wreckage and disaster.Boston Public LibraryImage
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Pearl Harbor, T. H., March 20 – (Left to right) Ex-Governor Maurice J. Tobin, of Boston, Mass., Admiral Louis E. Denfeld, USN., of Westboro, Mass., and Doctor Ernest M. Hopkins, President Emeritus of Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, meet at Headquarters of Admiral Denfeld, Commander-in-Chief of the Pacific and U.S. Pacific Fleet. Doctor Hopkins is Chairman of a committee recently appointed by Secretary of the Navy, James V. Forrestal, to study Naval Civil Government of Guam and Samoa, Governor Tobin being a member of that committee.Boston Public LibraryImage
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United States, including territories and insular possessions showing the extent of public surveys, national parks, national forests, Indian reservations, national wildlife refuges, and reclamation projectsBoston Public LibraryImage
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Meet Buckwheat -- U.S. Navy Seaman Michael W. Downey plays with Peruvian orphan nicknamed Buckwheat by crewmen aboard the U.S. helicopter carrier Guam anchored off Chimbote, Peru. Buckwheat and other victims of Peru's earthquake were brought to The Guam for medical aid. The 3-year-old Indian boy's left foot was crushed and had to be amputated. The crew took a liking to the tike and started a fund to provide for the boy. Earthquakes.Boston Public LibraryImage
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Revelacion a un hermitañoBoston Public LibraryImage
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Boston Public Library
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