A man wearing a hat, jacket and torn pants poses outside, with a pipe in one hand and a tin cup in the other. A tree and a fence are in the background. Title supplied by cataloger.
Five people on their way to church on Sunday morning. Two small children, Frank and Ben Robinson, ride a mule. Louise Wilson stands in the road holding a box and a Sunday School card. Tom Brown and Louisa Robinson are on the right.
Schools; Students; Teachers; Group portraits; Wooden buildings
A large class poses outside Bethany Academy at Big Creek. Bethany Academy was an auxiliary, or branch, school of Oneida Baptist Institute. T. L. Britton was in charge of this school for about ten years.
A dog-trot log cabin in the hills near Oneida. A wagon sits in front of the cabin and a man stands in the lower left corner. See ULPA 1982.01.128.p and ULPA 1982.01.812.p for interior images of this cabin.
A bedroom inside a cabin near Oneida. Newspapers cover the walls. There are pumpkins and melons under the bed and a sewing machine on the right. See ULPA 1982.01.127.p and ULPA 1982.01.812.p for other images of the same cabin.
A group of men and women, possibly trustees or board members at Oneida Baptist Institute, pose outside a frame building. See ULPA 1982.01.133.p for a similar picture of the same group.
A group portrait of seventeen men, perhaps some of the early trustees of Oneida Institute. Includes H. L. McMurray in the front row on the right, William Ponder in the second row on the right, Henry Hensley in the back row on the right, and James...
Board being dressed by hand on McMurray's place in the flats near Oneida. One man is working while two boys watch and another man sits against the wall at the right. The boy in the front is Neil McMurray; the taller boy might be Glen McMurray.The...
Home of H. L. McMurray, a Baptist preacher and co-founder of Oneida Baptist Institute, located in the flatwoods near Oneida between Bullskin and Red Bird Creeks.
Oneida Baptist Institute; Students; Boys; Group portraits; Play (recreation)
Thirteen boys pose for a group photograph on a hill. Two hold shinney sticks. Shinney was played like hockey but used handmade sticks and a tin can or rock.
A man stands in the woods beside his horse or mule. He is holding saddlebags or a satchel of some type. The man may be Professor L. D. Sandlin, who taught at Oneida Baptist Institute.