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You searched for: Year start: 1900Year end: 1910Place: is exactly 'Maine'Subject: BusinessesSubject: Store Business
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Subject
Type
Place
  • Maine
Date
Contributor
Title Type Subject Creator Date Place Rights
L. L. Bean, Inc. Outdoor Specialties by Mail from Maine
Northeast Harbor Library
  • Publication, Booklet
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Leon A. Gorman
  • 1981
  • Maine
Description:
By Leon A. Gorman, member of the Newcomen Society, president of L. L. Bean, Inc. Freeport, Maine.
W. P. Dickey & Co., Bangor
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Reference
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Maine
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
W. P. Dickey & Co., Bangor
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Cheese House, Trenton, Maine
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph, Transparency, Slide Transparency
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Margolies, John
  • 1984
  • Maine
  • No Known Copyright
Cheese House, Trenton, Maine
Southwest Harbor Public Library
William Patch Dickey at W.P. Dickey & Co., Bangor, Maine
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • People
  • Maine
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
Description:
William Patch Dickey is standing next to the desk in his prodigiously stocked hardware store on Broad Street in Bangor, Maine. Among the items shown for sale are: H & B pocket knives made by William L. Humason, Sr., who founded the Humason & Beckley Manufacturing Company of New Britain, Connecticut, in 1853. The company produced fine pocket cutlery, corkscrews and other hardware. Kerosene lamps of every description – hanging from the ceiling Chamois – hanging from the ceiling Many varieties of thermometers hanging in a row from the ceiling Shotguns and other knives Feather dusters String and a cast iron string holder A model of the Eiffel tower A small, portable steam engine, possibly a toy Chain and twine A beautiful wind-up alarm clock with a bell on top Cow bells Pratt & Lambert’s “Faultless Varnishes" Boxes of sleigh bells and shaft bells Glass. Mr. Dickey’s female clerk, carefully dressed in an apron with her hair put up in a bun, is standing at the desk. Items seen on the desk are: W.P. Dickey & Co. invoices neatly held by a painted tin box stenciled “Bill-Heads" Glass Ink pots Standard Liquid Glue A leather-bound ledger Steel-nibbed pens Rubber stamps [show more]