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Title
Description
Date

Group portrait of five men with a large bale of cotton in front of Texas Bank and Trust Co. on August 3, 1931. The man at right is possibly Fred E. Perry, cotton broker, and the man at center is possibly E. Ramirez, who sold the first bale of cotton of 1931 for $50.

1931-08-03

Exterior view of the Jordan - Ellison Co. with a display of Hawk-Eye camera boxes stacked out front. The sign says "Headquarters for $100,000.00 Picture Contest, Get Details Here, Regular $2.50, Eastman Camera for $1.49."

1951-03

View of the waterfall at Hamilton Pool and surrounding cliffs.

undated

Color postcard depicting the Austin Woman's Club building known as Chateau Bellevue. Built in 1874, Chateau Bellevue is romantic and elegant, with French Romanesque arches, beautiful courtyard grounds, a spacious ballroom, ornate hand-carved woodwork and stunning stained glass windows. Chateau Bellevue has been the headquarters of the Austin Woman's Club since 1929 and the Junior Austin Woman’s Club from 1940- 2019. The mansion was built by Harvey and Catherine North in 1874. The Norths were newcomers to Austin when construction began. It didn’t take long for Austin society to realize that the Norths were wealthy and cosmopolitan. Before coming to Austin, Harvey North was a merchant in New Orleans. He took his family on long visits to Europe, giving credence to the idea that Bellevue’s castle imagery evoked European castles. By 1876, North’s fortunes in Austin real estate began to falter. Just two years after building “Bellevue Place”, it was up for sale. Catherine North finally sold the mansion to Augusta Gaines and William Pendleton in 1881. The mansion sold for only half the amount it cost the Norths to build. In 1892, Major Ira Evans bought Bellevue Place and turned the home into a castle, with the help of noted Texas architect, Alfred Giles. Starting with North’s wooden porch (replaced with limestone in the 1920s) Giles extended the home toward the west with a series of graceful rusticated limestone arches. He fortified the rooftops with crenelations and added a side entrance of exquisitely carved limestone.

undated

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