UAH Archives, Special Collections, and Digital Initiatives

Browse Items (8239 total)

  • lonsdale.png

    Lonsdale is engaged in an experiment featuring a test tube and a microscope.
  • image1.png

    Left to right, standing: Martin Buerger, Harold Wyckoff, and Dame Kathleen Lonsdale lecturing to a class in front of a blackboard.
  • LoweWeavingDept.jpg

    Lowe Mill featured a variety of departments in the 1920s and produced a variety of textiles. This photo, taken in 1925, highlights the Weaving department of the textile mill.
  • LoweShoe.jpg

    After Lowe Mill closed, it reopened as a shoe factory after the Great Depression. This photo depicts several of the workers making shoes that were used across the country.
  • BehindPaymaster.jpg

    Lowe Mill was converted many times throughout its lifespan into different factories and storage facilities. This aerial view shows the changes made across the years.
  • HistPaymasterLowe.jpg

    The paymaster's office was built in 1910 and was an addition to Lowe Mill to provide the office staff a place to work separately. This photo depicts several of the workers who would have used the office located just outside Lowe Mill.
  • GenescoBaseball.jpg

    Baseball was one of the many fun activities done between mill workers to promote bonds and community among them. Lowe Mill, later Genesco, a shoe plant as depicted here, was no exception to this.
  • LoweClothDept.jpg

    Lowe Mill relied heavily off of a water tower to maintain its production capabilities as a textile mill. The shipping and cloth room employees pose for a photo in front of the water tower in 1925.
  • LoweMillMainstreet.jpg

    The village surrounding Lowe Mill in the early 1900s. It features several stores as well as a wide road, and a horse and buggy carriage.
  • Sports-Negro_Baseball_League-Players_on_a_Bench_Including_Ted_Rasberry_with_Sam_Allen_and_Eugene_Scruggs - Copy.jpg

    The All-Star Negro League played exhibition games at Dallas (Optimist) Park throughout the early to mid-20th century. Since African Americans were not allowed to join the Major Leagues, many of them played for the Negro League.