An interesting family at Broadfording
The bookmobile visits Broadfording.
The bookmobile visits Broadfording.
A deposit station was a collection of books held in a location in the county. This particular collection was stored in a private home, that of Miss Anna Shirk of the village of Beautiful View, near the Pennsylvania line. Miss Shirk was listed in the 1906 Bulletin as having a deposit station at her home.
Title In Annual report 1912- 1913 - Books for Old and Young.
Reverse of loose photograph: Isaiah Hull, Clearspring R.1
Children at the Bookmobile, 1912-1916 at Dry Run, north of Clear Spring.
The bookmobile is parked along a road. A whitewashed log cabin is in the picture. The librarian wears a winter coat, the two women looking at the bookmobile shelves do not.
Edward Kinsell sits on the front porch of his "Cozy Corner" home located between Clear Spring and Green Spring Furnace. The book depository for the Washington County Free Library can be seen on the porch.
According to the Annual Report of 1906, Mr. Kinsell was sent 150 books for the Green Spring Furnace Deposit Station.
The book deposit station at Green Spring Furnace was a wooden case placed outside a house. Some readers needed to step on a box to reach the books.
Selecting books near Lane's Run in western Washington County.
The bookmobile stops by the Baltimore and Ohio train tracks at Cohill Station, western Washington County.
The 1912 bookmobile struggles up Fairview Mountain.