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Gift of Claude Albert, 2011.498.3  © 2013 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Hartford Boat, Hartford, Conn.
Gift of Claude Albert, 2011.498.3 © 2013 The Connecticut Historical Society.

Hartford Boat, Hartford, Conn.

Date1919-1930
MediumPhotomechanical prints; colored printer's inks on postcard
DimensionsPrimary Dimensions (image height x width): 3 1/8 x 5 1/8in. (7.9 x 13cm) Sheet (height x width): 3 1/2 x 5 1/2in. (8.9 x 14cm)
ClassificationsGraphics
Credit LineGift of Claude Albert
Object number2011.498.3
DescriptionA steamboat with twin smokestacks is at a dock on the far side of a river. The name "Hartford" is on the side of the ship. Wharves and warehouses are visible along the waterfront. The skyline is dominated by the tower of Travelers Insurance Company and the Hartford Bank building.
NotesSubject Note: The screw steamer Hartford was built in Baltimore in1899. She was one of several vessels owned by subsidiary companies of the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad that coordinated rail-steamboat travel connecting New York and New England cities. Hartford ran between New York City and Hartford until 1931. She was scrapped in 1938. (Finlay 2/1/2011)
Status
Not on view
Gift of Claude Albert, 2011.498.11  © 2013 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Trinity Stationery Company
1915-1930
Gift of Claude Albert, 2011.498.4  © 2013 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Trinity Stationery Company
1915-1930
Gift of Claude Albert, 2011.498.8  © 2013 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Trinity Stationery Company
after 1919
Gift of Claude Albert, 2011.498.1  © 2013 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Trinity Stationery Company
1915-1930
2004.52.213
Edwin Augustus Moore
1896
View of Norwich, from the South. 1853.
Elijah Chapman Kellogg
1853
Gift of the heirs of Morgan B. Brainard, 1965.33.40  © 2010 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Unknown
1875-1879
Gift of Titus H. Darrow, 1985.6.1, Connecticut Historical Society, Copyright Undetermined
Elijah Chapman Kellogg
1853
1953.5.304 © 2001 The Connecticut Historical Society.
John Warner Barber
1849