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Wooster Digital History Project

Browse Items (516 total)

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An advertisement for the 1923 Wayne County Fair. We are able to see that while livestock is still the most prevalent attraction, cars are becoming popular. (It should be noted that before World War II, cars were an extravagance, so an auto show was…

OAES's First Campus.png
Ohio Agriculture Experiment Station's first campus in Columbus, OH in 1887.

First OARDC Staff.png
The first staff photo for the Ohio Agriculture Experiment Station's leading men and women, taken in 1895. The man in the middle of the front row is the first director of the OAES, Charles Thorne.

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A crowd gathers around Charles Thorne while he discusses Wheat Field Day in 1918.

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An advertisement for the one hundredth Wayne County Fair, which includes a brief history of the fair, as well as a schedule of events. The WCF was designed to be a family affair, as evidence by children having days off from school. Additionally, the…

OAES Invite.png
The relocation of the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station, later renamed the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Station, from Columbus, OH to Wooster, OH.

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Wooster DH Interns Summer 2015.jpeg
l to r: Hope Nelson, Brandon Bell, Jacob Hailperin-Lausch, and Colleen Gilfether

Lepold On the 146th Regiment.mp4
Interview with Charles Lepold, military specialist for the Wayne County Historical Society, in which he discusses the role of the 146th Infantry in WWI

Stinebring Memories of Rubbermaid.mp4
Interview with former Rubbermaid employee Rozella Stinebring, in which she discusses

John_E_Sheridan_WWI_US_Food_is_Ammunition_Dont_Waste_it (thumbnail).jpg
WWI poster for the United States Food Administration, featuring the slogan, "Food is Ammunition - Don't Waste It"

WWI Propaganda_Destroy this Mad Brute (thumbnail).jpg
A 1917 Committee on Public Information propaganda poster depicting a German soldier as a monstrous ape featuring the words, "Destroy this Mad Brute."

WDR_1918.08.17_Woman Talked Pro-Hun.jpg
This 1918 Wooster Daily Republican article states that an elderly Wooster woman was arrested for "pro-German talk," and later released with a warning.

WDR_1917.12.03_Spy Was Hobo.jpg
This Wooster Daily Republican article describes an incident that occurred in Rittman , when a "harmless hobo" was mistaken for a German spy.

WDR_1917.04.07_Students Chop Kaiser's Head_1.jpg
This 1917 Wooster Daily Republican article describes an incident in which several College of Wooster students broke into a German classroom and removed the head from a portrait of Kaiser Wilhelm.

WDN_1917.10.24_Anti-German Propaganda.jpg
This Anti-German propaganda image was printed in the Wooster Daily News in October 1917

Liberty Bonds_Beat Back the Hun (323x500).jpg
A 1917 Committee on Public Information poster featuring an inhuman looking German soldier and the words, "Beat back the Hun with Liberty Bonds!"

LoC_Eckert.jpg
This photograph shows Thomas Eckert, who worked as Wooster's postmaster and telegraph operator in the 1850s.

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WDN_SaloonKeepersQuitBusiness_1908.11.09.jpg
This article from the Wooster Daily News describes how the vote to make Wayne a dry county resulted in the closure of the saloons in the cities surrounding Wooster.

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Michael Nachtrieb was a well-known portrait painter in Wooster, who painted depictions of many of the city's important citizens. He also painted portraits of national celebrities, including Abraham Lincoln and Robert E. Lee.

WDR_1917.05.31_Freedlanders War Bonds.jpg
An advertisement for Liberty Bonds, sponsored by Freedlander's Department Store, which appeared in the Wooster Daily Republican in 1917

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A Systems Map of the operational Baltimore & Ohio railways during World War II.

PRR-I1s-OWI.jpg
1s 2-10-0 steam locomotive prepares to leave the Pennsylvania Railroad docks at Cleveland with a trainload of iron ore in May, 1943. United States Office of War Information photo.

StullHairClinic copy.JPG
Wooster’s Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Freight Station still exists in the form of Stull’s Hair Clinic, located off of the junction between Columbus Avenue and Vanover Street.
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