Rosetown 100 block Main Street west side
- FGPC-T-P226
- Stuk
- [ca. 1927]
100 block Main St. Rosetown, businesses on west side of street shown with the train station at the south end of the street visible.
Zonder titel
Rosetown 100 block Main Street west side
100 block Main St. Rosetown, businesses on west side of street shown with the train station at the south end of the street visible.
Zonder titel
Rosetown 50th birthday then and now
A composite photo of Rosetown in 1911 and again in 1961, the top photo of this composition photo is taken from possibly an elevator on the railway. The second photo is taken possibly from the top of the York Hotel looking up Main Street.
A composite of eight Rosetown scenes on a 1916 Christmas Card. (clockwise) Railroad station, Rosetown Hotel, house on 300 6th Ave., Main St., new hospital, 1st Ave. E.., Dr. Myers private hospital, Main St. from train station.
First photo of Main Street Rosetown
A winter scene with four wooden structures and one building under construction.
The original Legion Building and Cook & Sons
The Legion Branch No. 66 built in 1927 located at 112 A 1st Avenue East rebuild in 1968. M.E. Cooks Plumbing built in 1959.
Six persons left to right [Henry Evans, Reg Conlin, unknown, unknown, unknown and Linus Kunkel] in a car [McLaughlin] in front of Conlin & Evans Farm Machinery Agency, 110 Main Street; next door Mrs. Jamison's Ladies Wear and Beauty Parlor.
East side of Main Street in Zealandia looking north.
Employees of Locke's Drugstore
L-R: Unknown, Dean Harris (pharmacist and owner), Marilyn Harris, Hope Brown.
Conlin & Evans place of business
Located on 100 block east side on Rosetown's Main Street. The business sold and maintained farm machinery. Six men are seated on the sidewalk dressed in suits, ties, hats. Most appear to be wearing ankle boots with laces.
A row of shops on 1st Avenue in Zealandia. The livery stable is at the end of the row just behind the windmill. A man places bricks along the side of a building in the forefront of the photo.
Two men stand inside a harness shop. Gloves, harnesses, leads, and more hang and are stacked throughout the shop. Identities are not known, but there was a Harness & Saddlery shop owned by a W.A. Messner in Zealandia in 1913.