Niagara Reservation (N.Y.)
Found in 71 Collections and/or Records:
100 Years: Articles + Brochures, 1985
Information related to the Niagara Historic Trail and the Niagara Reservation concerning the 1985 Centennial of the park. Four copies of a "NY Alive" magazine edition.
Advertisements and other NF ephemera, 1866-2001
Advertisement for the Cave of the Winds, historic images, invitation to a breakfast at the Native American Center for the Living Arts (1988), program from the opening of a mural at the Factory Outlets (1997), promotional election material, a calendar commemorating the Civil War (1866), and more general historical material.
Assorted Hotel documents, 1792-1935
Assorted documents, primarily from the 1800s, concerning the Niagara Reservation, Cataract Hotel, railroads, tourism, and more. Included are four bound volumes - an 1872 diary for Farm Garden, a 1792 copy of the play The School for Scandal, a bound volume titled The Altar Service of the Episcopal Church belonging to Solon Whitney, and a military register for soldiers that served under Peter A. Porter.
Boulder Bridge [Island Bridge] + French Landing (Lower Loop) Bridge
Photographs of the Boulder Bridge to Willow Island, some mounted
Box Q-9 (books) - Porter #1 Books + Poems, 1703-1905
Box S-5, Pledge Books, State Reservation, 1885
Box S-5 contains: vols. 1-4 and 6 (#5 is missing) of these volumes. They are bound books filled with pledges by people to write their representatives to vote for the bill to "preserve the scenery of Niagara". From the State of New York Assembly Chamber. From the Niagara Falls Historical Society.
Centennial, 1984-1985
Materials related to the Niagara Reservation Centennial including correspondences with the Niagara Reservation Centennial Commission, invitations, and programs
Centennial - 1985, 1985
Newspaper clippings concerning the Niagara Centennial
Centennial celebration poster, 1985
Centennial celebration poster for the Niagara Reservation, oversized.
Centennial Correspondences, 1985
Letters sent by the Niagara Reservation Centennial Commission to library historian Donald Loker