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1451 |
| Charlie Keller Baseball Card. Charlie Keller Baseball Card. |
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1452 |
| Charlie Keller. Charlie Keller. |
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1453 |
| Charlie Ruth Roughton Arizona, Phoenix, Phoenix Union High School, 1934 |
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1454 |
| Charlie Taft on Horse. Charlie Taft on Horse. |
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1455 |
| Charlotte Chase. Charlotte Chase. |
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1456 |
| Charlotte May (nee Brigham) Lavis Charlotte May (nee Brigham) Lavis |
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1457 |
| Charlotte Offlow Fawcett. Charlotte Offlow Fawcett. |
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1458 |
| Chauncey Griswold Webb. From' "Wife No. 19 A life In Bondage" by Ann Eliza Young. Dustin, Gilman & Co. Hartford, Connecticut 1876. Page 444. |
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1459 |
| Cheating Death Below. Scrap book clipping. Publication detail not preserved. |
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1460 |
| Cheers Cast. Ted Danson (Left)
David Angell (center)
On the set of the television show "Cheers". |
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1461 |
| Cheers. Kirstie (center) is best known for her roll on the TV sitcom "Cheers". She replaced Shelly Long in the sixth season and remained until the eleventh and final season.
Ted Danson (left) |
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1462 |
| Cheers. Shelly is best known as "Diane Chambers" from the series "Cheers". She played the roll 123 times from 1982 to 1993. |
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1463 |
| Cheryl Harlacher Illinois, Streator, Streator Township High School, 1971 |
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1464 |
| Cheryl S Scheick Cheryl S Scheick |
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1465 |
| Chester Bennington Chester Bennington |
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1466 |
| Chester Bennington Fame. Chester Bennington - Lead singer for "Linkin Park". My 11th cousin. |
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1467 |
| Chester Bennington's Memorial Los Angeles. While Chester's memorial service was closed to the public, makeshift memorials popped up in Los Angeles, Shanghai, Moscow, Lima, Peru and, other locations. The family has not made public what if anything has been done with his cremains. |
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1468 |
| Chester Bennington. Chester Bennington. |
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1469 |
| Chevy Chase Chevy Chase |
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1470 |
| Chevy Chase. Chevy Chase. |
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1471 |
| Chicago 1820. Chicago Lithograph Company 1867. |
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1472 |
| Chicago 1893 By Peter Roy, copyright 1892. |
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1473 |
| Chicago 1931. Chicago 1931. |
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1474 |
| Chicago after the 1871 Chicago Fire. Chicago after the 1871 Chicago Fire. |
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1475 |
| Chicago After the Fire. Library of Congress Control Number 2003671553. Publisher date not verified. |
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1476 |
| Chicago Champions 1876-77 Chicago White Stockings baseball team. Spalding is in the center. |
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1477 |
| Chicago Circa 1860. John Kleinfeld emigrated in 1863. Library of Congress call number; G4104.C6A3 1860 .C5
Publishing details not recorded. |
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1478 |
| Chicago Fire Burned District. Chicago Fire Burned District. |
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1479 |
| Chicago Flag. The Chicago flag was designed by Wallace Rice.
The three white stripes of the flag represent the North, West and South sides of the city. The top blue stripe represents Lake Michigan and the North Branch of the Chicago River. The bottom blue stripe represents the South Branch of the river and the "Great Canal", over the Chicago Portage.
The first star represents Fort Dearborn. It was added to the flag in 1939. Its six points symbolize transportation, labor, commerce, finance, populousness, and salubrity.
The second star stands for the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, and is original to the 1917 design of the flag. Its six points represent the virtues of religion, education, aesthetics, justice, beneficence, and civic pride.
The third star symbolizes the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893, and is original to the 1917 design. Its six points stand for political entities Chicago has belonged to and the flags that have flown over the area: France 1693, Great Britain 1763, Virginia 1778, the Northwest Territory 1789, Indiana Territory 1802, and Illinois (territory 1809, and state 1818).
The fourth star represents the Century of Progress Exposition (1933–1934), and was added in 1933. Its points refer to bragging rights: the United States' 2nd Largest City (became 3rd largest in 1990 census when passed by Los Angeles), Chicago's Latin Motto (Urbs in horto – City in a garden), Chicago's "I Will" Motto, the Great Central Marketplace, Wonder City, and Convention City. |
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1480 |
| Chicago Sunrise Chicago sunrise |
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1481 |
| Chicago Theatre. Chicago Theatre. |
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1482 |
| Chicago welcomes the Apollo 11 astronauts. The returning astronauts received ticker tape parades in several major cities. |
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1483 |
| Chicxulub crater. In March 2010, an international panel of scientists endorsed the Alvarez hypothesis. They specified that the Chicxulub crater discovered in 1978 was the specific event that caused the extinction.
After some 66 million years the 93 mile wide crater is no longer visible. However gravitational anomalies and geological evidence prove it's existence. the energy release of the Chicxulub impact was approximately 100 million megatons. The largest bomb ever tested yielded about 50 megatons. It is an event that radically reshaped life on Earth. |
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1484 |
| Chief Aptakisic. Painting by artist Les Schrader, Potawatomi Chief Aptakisic says goodbye to Naperville settlers after escorting them to Fort Dearborn in Chicago during the Black Hawk War of 1832.
Half Day was named for Chief Aptakistic (pronounced: Op-ta-gu-shick). His name name roughly translated to “center of the sky” or “half day.”
Lake County’s first permanent white settler, Daniel Wright, recalled that the chief and his tribe helped him build his home, tended his crops, and cared for his family after he moved to the area in 1833. |
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1485 |
| Chief Hollow Horn Bear. Perhaps the most important feature of the coin was the portrait. It has long been assumed that President Lincoln was the first actual person to be featured on a U.S. coin minted for circulation.
It is not until recently that researchers have confirmed that Bela's coin design was that of a living person. Before Bela's coin Indian head coins were fictional and often contained cultural inaccuracies.
Through archived letters and pictures that Bela left behind when he died researchers have confirmed that Bela's design is the likeness of Chief Hollow Horn Bear, a Brulé Lakota leader. He fought in the battles of the Sioux Wars, including the Battle of Little Big Horn. The Lincoln cent was released in 1909 so the Chief was the first actual person on a U.S. coin by a year. |
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1486 |
| Chief Hollow Horn Bear. Six tribal leaders. Chief Hollow Horn Bear is second from the right. The occasion was Teddy Roosevelt's inauguration in 1905.
The Chief made a number of trips to Washington D.C. and even argued in front of the Supreme Court on behalf of his people.
After his death is likeness appeared on a U.S. Postage stamp and a Military Payment Script (a form of paper currency). Because Bela worked from photographs the chief may never have known he was on this coin. |
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1487 |
| Chief Justice Kathleen A Blatz. See here delivering the 2014 Saint John's University Commencement Address. |
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1488 |
| Chief Justice Salmon Chase. Chief Justice Salmon Chase. |
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1489 |
| Chief Kanosh. Chief Kanosh. |
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1490 |
| Chief Tul-lux Hol-li-quil-la Chief Tul-lux Hol-li-quil-la |
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1491 |
| Children and spouses of David and Lestina Ware. Children and spouses of David and Lestina Ware. |
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1492 |
| Children of American Born Italian Noblewoman. The New York Herald, Sunday, September 24, 1922 section 3 page 2. |
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1493 |
| Children of David and Lestina Ware Children of David and Lestina Ware |
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1494 |
| Children of Ethan L. Wadsworth. From: Scenes, memories, and travels of eighty-two years : and short sketches of the Lanphear and Potter families, by Ethan Lanphear, self published, Plainfield, New Jersey 1900. |
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1495 |
| Children of Lavinia (nee Lanphear) Willard. From: Scenes, memories, and travels of eighty-two years : and short sketches of the Lanphear and Potter families, by Ethan Lanphear, self published, Plainfield, New Jersey 1900. |
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1496 |
| Children's pet zoo exhibit, Zoological Park, Detroit, MI. Children's pet zoo exhibit, Zoological Park, Detroit, MI. Postcard image circa 1930–1945. |
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1497 |
| Chim-Chim Chim-Chim from "Speed Racer" |
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1498 |
| China Kantner. China Kantner. |
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1499 |
| Chitty Chitty Bang Bang Dick Van dyke in "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" |
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1500 |
| Chris and Katherine Pratt. Chris and Katherine Pratt. |
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